The Union Democrat

Putting lives before money

- By Graham Dunbar

AFC urged to mandate human rights into 2027 Asian Cup bids The Associated Press

A global activist group urged Asia’s soccer body on Wednesday to mandate respecting human rights into bidding for and organizing the 2027 Asian Cup.

Expected bidders include India, Iran, Qatar and Saudi Arabia ahead of a June 30 deadline set by the Asian Football Confederat­ion to enter the contest.

The Sport & Rights Alliance said it asked the AFC to apply the same rights standards FIFA set for the 2026 World Cup that the United States, Mexico and Canada will co-host.

“All these standards should not be based on goodwill but must be non-negotiable and binding for all stakeholde­rs,” the SRA group of trade unions and rights advocates said in a letter to the AFC’S president, Sheikh Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-khalifa of Bahrain.

Key issues cited include protecting labor rights, minority groups and media, plus consulting with independen­t experts and allowing monitoring of tournament operations for the next seven years.

The Asian soccer body’s legal statutes commit it to “respecting all internatio­nally recognized human rights and shall strive to promote the protection of those rights.”

“We have to convert the paper commitment into a cultural commitment backed by resources and determinat­ion,” Brendan Schwab, executive director of the World Players Associatio­n union, said in a telephone interview.

Schwab, a lawyer from Australia, said the Asian governing body had “enormous challenges to confront. It’s something we think they can embrace.”

Iran has been criticized for a ban of nearly 40 years on women attending soccer games, with some progress made last year under pressure from local campaigner­s supported by FIFA.

Saudi Arabia has pushed to host more internatio­nal sports events amid condemnati­on of its human rights record and role in the 2018 killing of journalist Jamal Khashoggi. It is also competing with Qatar to host the 2030 Asian Games.

Qatar’s treatment of its migrant labor workforce building projects for the 2022 World Cup has been scrutinize­d since winning the FIFA vote in 2010.

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