News and developments
Violations by Commercial Outlets
The present article deals with the violations by vendors of commercial products and services fined by the Qatar Ministry of Economy and Commerce during the preceding month.
It was revealed by the Ministry as a result of its inspection campaign conducted during the last month. The campaign was made according to the stipulations by the Consumer Protection Law of Qatar, with an aim to safeguard the rights of consumers.
The above Law authorises the Ministry to monitor commercial activities and find out if there is any manipulation in the prices or related procedures. The Ministry can also look into whether the consumer’s rights are being protected.
According to the above Law a ‘consumer’ can be a person who buys and uses a commodity or service, with or without consideration for him or for the need of his family or any person who has made an agreement concerning the said commodity or service.
As a part of the campaign, the Ministry issued orders to close the outlets and ordered fines following the regulations of the Consumer Protection ‘Anti-Commercial Fraud’ Department, which is one among the five departments.
During the campaign around 137 violations were notified by the Ministry relating to products and services.
The violations include, failure to display product details, failure to issue Arabic bills, failure to announce the prices of products, services, intentionally reducing weight in packages etc. The Ministry reiterated that it is bound to follow the guidelines specified by the Law and therefore, it will not tolerate violations and will carry on the campaign effectively and refer the violators to competent authorities.
The Ministry compels the consumers to report violations through their call centres, by email as well as social media networks like Instagram and twitter.
The public especially the consumers and those engaged in commercial activities should be aware of the violations fined by the Ministry. It has been listed by the Ministry as follows:
Among the above, most of the violations fall under the first six categories. The Ministry imposed fines ranging from QAR 5,000 up to QAR 30,000 on violators.