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Article

4 Apr 2022

Author:
Michael Page, Deputy Director, Middle East and North Africa Division, HRW

Qatar 2022: In wake of FIFA congress, HRW call for football associations to "leverage their platform" & spotlight human rights abuse

"No ‘Beautiful Game’ Without Rights in Qatar," 1 April 2022

On March 31, as FIFA convened its 72nd Congress in Doha, one speaker took a brave stance on the uncomfortable truth about human rights in Qatar.

Lise Klaveness, the Norwegian Football Association president, directly called out FIFA’s failure to protect human rights when selecting Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup...

Klaveness urged FIFA to ensure the migrant workers injured and families of those who died in the build up to the World Cup are cared for...

As the World Cup fast approaches, football associations are increasingly facing pressure to speak up on persistent rights abuses. England manager Gareth Southgate recently expressed concerns about migrant workers’ rights in Qatar and the conditions they live in, and how fans, including lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) people, may feel threatened to visit Qatar due to its repressive laws. While Qatari authorities call them “isolated cases,” organizations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have consistently documented how many migrant workers, mainly from Asian and African countries, face widespread wage theft, debt bondage from high recruitment fees, illness due to employer negligence and working in searing heat, and unexplained deaths...

Now, football associations need to support them and others facing repression in the country by leveraging their platform and putting the spotlight on human rights as boldly as Klaveness did.

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