The Sentinel-Record

Qatar prepares for World Cup amid rights concerns

- ROB HARRIS

As European teams set out on their paths to the 2022 World Cup, scrutiny of Qatar is far from subsiding.

Criticism is intensifyi­ng as teams come under pressure from activists and fans to register disapprova­l of discrimina­tory laws and conditions for the migrant workers preparing the Gulf nation for kickoff on Nov. 21, 2022.

Just this week FIFA President Gianni Infantino received a letter from Amnesty Internatio­nal recognizin­g Qatar’s recent progress in improving worker rights since being awarded the World Cup in a 2010 vote but asking for enforcemen­t of those changes to be prioritize­d.

Qatar says it on track to complete all eight stadiums by the start of 2022 after spending tens of billions of dollars upgrading the tiny, gas-rich nation, with half the venues already open.

BOYCOTT CALLS

No country has announced plans to boycott the tournament, although Norway, which features Borussia Dortmund star Erling Haaland, is facing calls to do so from some of top division clubs, including Rosenborg and Tromso.

Norway coach Stale Solbakken has indicated his players will use their first qualifier — against Gibraltar on Wednesday — to register concerns about human rights abuses in Qatar.

“The word dialogue is very vague and very cowardly. There must be pressure. Direct measures must be taken to make things better,” Solbakken told Norwegian broadcaste­r TV2. “We can do things that the world might see. Sports can send signals.”

Over in the Netherland­s, stand-in captain Georginio Wijnaldum cautioned Tuesday against linking anti-racism campaigns with moves to reduce discrimina­tion in Qatar against workers from southwest Asia.

“It is not that we have chosen to play football in Qatar ourselves,” said Wijnaldum, who won the Club World Cup in Qatar with Liverpool in 2019.

DEATHS

The Dutch football federation (KNVB) said it was “absolutely appalling” to see that more than 6,500 migrant workers in Qatar from India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka have died in the last decade, according to research by The Guardian newspaper.

“The KNVB has never been in favor of holding the World Cup in Qatar and of course certainly doesn’t approve of the way in which migrant workers are treated there,” the federation said.

Qatar only provides details of the deaths on stadium sites, saying there have been 38, of which three have been work-related. One of those came on the site of the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium, where British worker Zac Cox was found by a British coroner to have fallen from a suspended walkway due to dangerous working conditions.

FIFA and Qatar have declined requests to release details from the inquiry into the 2017 death and how the failings were addressed.

Preparing for the World Cup is about a lot more than building the stadiums, with roads, a Metro system and hotels to be constructe­d — often in the fierce heat that led to the tournament being shifted from FIFA’s usual June-July slot. The Qatari government provides no data on fatalities, nor are there the type of open death inquests like the one eventually conducted back in Britain on Cox.

RIGHTS CHANGES

Projects under the auspices of the World Cup were quicker to improve living and building conditions for migrant workers after pressure from rights groups, which also highlighte­d excessive working hours, unpaid wages and restrictio­ns on freedom of movement.

Amnesty this week welcomed “a number of positive reforms” introduced while saying they are “often not properly implemente­d, and thousands of migrant workers are still exploited and abused.” The rights group claims Qatar’s advisory body, the Shura Council, is seeking to re-impose restrictio­ns on workers’ rights to change jobs or leave Qatar.

The Qatari government said those changes were staying along with introducin­g from Saturday a non-discrimina­tory minimum wage that combined to make it a “more attractive destinatio­n for global talent and investment.”

QUALIFYING STATUS

The only one of the 32 countries to have secured its place at the finals is the one making its World Cup debut: Qatar, thanks to its status as host. The Asian champions will be gaining crucial match experience after being paired to play friendlies against the teams in the European qualifying group containing European champion Portugal.

Due to the coronaviru­s pandemic, the last region to start qualifying will be Oceania to determine which nation plays an interconti­nental playoff to try to secure a place at the finals.

Qualifying in South America began last year but is on hold with no matches this month due to travel restrictio­ns. Like Europe, qualifying is beginning this week in the CONCACAF region which includes North America, while Asian teams are also playing this week to try to secure slots in Qatar.

The main group stage in African qualifying is due to start in June.

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