The Irish Mail on Sunday

I feel gay, I feel Arab and I feel disabled – FIFA boss in ‘crass and clumsy’ speech

Infantino’s bizarre Qatar support

- From Dominic King IN DOHA

GIANNI INFANTINO took his seat in the cavernous media theatre and, slowly, shook his head. His expression was sombre, his voice was low. ‘Let’s hope to speak a little bit about football,’ FIFA’s president began.

You knew, instantly, this was not going to be an ordinary press conference. Infantino would have loved to ‘stick to football’ and let’s not forget he sent a letter to all nations competing at the World Cup imploring them to do just that, to avoid speaking about the myriad off-field issues around Qatar.

But Infantino saw to it that football was the last thing on anyone’s mind, with a bizarre and deluded near hour-long monologue, swerving his way through the most contentiou­s topics and leaving his audience dumbfounde­d, often gasping incredulou­sly.

‘Today I have strong feelings,’ he said. ‘Today I feel Qatari. Today I feel Arab. Today I feel African. Today I feel gay. Today I feel disabled. Today I feel a migrant worker. And I feel this because what I have seen and it brings me back to my personal story. I’m a son of migrant workers.

‘My parents were working very, very hard and in very, very difficult conditions — not in Qatar, in Switzerlan­d. I remember as a child how migrant workers were treated when they looked for work and I remember what happened with their passports.’

And he was away. For the next 57 minutes Infantino went on the charge — watched throughout by two men on the front row of the middle tier of an auditorium that would have dwarfed many West End theatres.

They were dressed in traditiona­l Qatari attire. Who they were is unclear but they carried the air of importance. The significan­ce of them being there was added to by the fact they had gone by the time Infantino took questions.

‘Infantino’s comments were as crass as they were clumsy and suggest the FIFA president is getting his talking points direct from the Qatari authoritie­s,’ said Nicholas McGeechan, director of Fair Square, a human rights research group.

They were absolute crass, so let’s get back to it. There was an attack on the West from Infantino, who lives in Doha, accusing them of racism and insisting those who have criticised Qatar over their employment of migrant workers were on shaky foundation­s.

‘What is sad, in these last weeks, we have been seeing in some places a real lesson on morals, on double morals,’ he said. ‘I think what Europe has been doing for the last 3,000 years, we should apologise for the next 3,000 years for what we have done.

‘I do not have to defend Qatar. I am defending football and injustice. Who actually cares about these issues? FIFA does. Football does. The World Cup does. And, to be fair, Qatar does. This will be the best World Cup ever. When the ball starts rolling, that is what people want.’

When taking those words into account, be reminded that 15,000 migrant workers (monthly salary £220) lost their lives between 2011 and 2021 as the eight glitzy stadiums were constructe­d for the extravagan­za that begins today.

‘Hundreds of thousands of workers from developing countries, they leave their own country and help their families to survive,’ Infantino, who commands an annual wage of £3million, continued. ‘They do it in a legal way. We in Europe, we close our borders.

‘Those who reach Europe, or those who want to come, have to go through very difficult journeys. Only a few survive. So if you really care about the destiny of these people — these young people — Europe can do as Qatar did.

‘Create some channels, some legal channels, to increase the percentage of these workers to come to Europe.’

From migrant workers, he moved on to matters surroundin­g LGBTQ+. Infantino had earlier told a story of how, as the son of Italian migrants, he had experience­d bullying through his childhood and been excluded due to his ‘ginger hair and freckles’.

Inclusivit­y, he stressed, was something important to him and to FIFA. But nobody has ever said FIFA was homophobic — the issue here was the concerns those from the LGBTQ+ community harboured about their safety in a country where homosexual­ity is illegal.

‘Everyone is welcome,’ he said. ‘If you say the opposite, it is not the opinion of the country. Everyone who comes to Qatar is welcome, whatever their religion, race or sexuality. This was our requiremen­t and the Qatari state sticks to that requiremen­t.

‘You will tell me, “Yeah but there are legislatio­ns where you can go to jail”; yes — these legislatio­ns exist in many countries around the world. These legislatio­ns existed in Switzerlan­d when they organised the World Cup in 1954. These are processes.

‘What do you want do? Stay at home and hammer and say how bad they are, these Arabs, these Muslims because it is not allowed to be publicly gay? Of course I believe it should be allowed. If you think you will achieve something by hammering and criticisin­g, I tell you it will be the opposite.

‘If you provoke me, I react. And that is not good. Try to defend the right causes by engaging. That is the only thing I ask.’

Infantino wasn’t asking, though. He was preaching. ‘Let the people enjoy the World Cup!’ he proclaimed. ‘We do not spit on the others because they look different or they feel different. Help us. Do not divide. We have a city that wants to welcome the world. Let us please celebrate.’

And, with that, he again told everyone to focus on football. The irony, of course, was he had made it impossible.

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