FIFA told to consider human rights in World Cup expansion plan

FIFA told to consider human rights in World Cup expansion plan

by Joseph Anthony
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FIFA President Gianni Infantino

A coalition of human rights groups, football fans, players and trade unions has urged FIFA president Gianni Infantino to confirm that any country chosen to share World Cup 2022 games with Qatar will meet world footballโ€™s new ethical standards.


The possible expansion of the next World Cup from 32 to 48 teams is top of the agenda at a meeting of the FIFA Council in Miami on Friday, with Infantino keen on an idea that would mean Qatar having to share the World Cup with other nations in the Middle East.

That idea would need Qatarโ€™s approval, which is far from certain as it has been locked in a bitter diplomatic dispute with Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates since June 2017, but the more neutral Kuwait and Oman have been suggested as possible co-hosts.

Experts on workersโ€™ rights in the region have been highly critical of the controversial decision to award the World Cup to Qatar in December 2010 and are now equally concerned about the prospect of one or more countries in the region having to build stadiums and upgrade infrastructure in a hurry.

And those concerns have now been sent to Infantino in an open letter signed by Amnesty International, Football Supporters Europe, Gulf Centre for Human Rights, Human Rights Watch, International Trade Union Congress, Transparency International, UNI Global Union and the World Players Association.


The letter points out that an enlarged World Cup would require additional hosts and โ€œcalls onโ€ Infantino to guarantee those hosts would meet the โ€œhuman rights, transparency and sustainability criteriaโ€ FIFA introduced in 2017.

It also says additional hosts in the Gulf region raises fresh โ€œhuman rights risksโ€ related to an โ€œexploitative labour systems that make migrant workers vulnerable to abuse; discrimination based on gender, sexual orientation and religion; restrictions on the rights to freedom of peaceful assembly, association and expression, and threats to human rights defendersโ€.

In a statement, Amnestyโ€™s deputy director of global issues Stephen Cockburn said: โ€œThere are clear risks associated with adding new hosts for the 2022 World Cup, not least the potential widespread exploitation of migrant workers providing construction and other services for the World Cup that could cast a major shadow over the worldโ€™s biggest sporting event.


โ€œGianni Infantino has said he wants to make the World Cup more inclusive. This means FIFA must assess potential co-hosts in Gulf countries to ensure that the World Cup is not contributing or linked to human rights violations which are rife in the region.โ€

Responding to the coalition plea, a FIFA spokesperson said: โ€œFIFAโ€™s stance and commitment to human rights are unequivocal and integrated in the hosting requirements of all our future tournaments in accordance with our human rights policy.

โ€œAs the feasibility study that will be presented to the FIFA Council on Friday confirms, this would not be different in the case of a potential co-host already in 2022.โ€

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