Jakarta Globe – AFP, Mar 30, 2014
Doha, Qatar. FIFA 2022 football World Cup host Qatar, criticized for the dire conditions of foreign laborers building facilities for the tournament, is holding a competition just for them, organizers said on Saturday.
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| Migrant laborers walk past a board on a construction site in Doha in Qatar on October 3, 2013 (AFP Photo/Karim Jaafar) |
Doha, Qatar. FIFA 2022 football World Cup host Qatar, criticized for the dire conditions of foreign laborers building facilities for the tournament, is holding a competition just for them, organizers said on Saturday.
And the
manager of a public relations firm in Qatar said the tournament is aimed at
deflating accusations that Doha is mistreating the migrants building the venues
for the World Cup.
“We care
about the workers because they are the ones building the stadiums and
facilities,” said Nasser Kuwari.
Labor
unions and rights campaigners say the migrant workers building the
multi-million-dollar infrastructure for the World Cup facing difficult living
and working conditions in energy-rich Qatar.
Amnesty
International has they were being treated like “animals,” and urged FIFA to
press Qatar to improve the conditions of the laborers, most of them from South
Asia.
And a
report by the International Trade Union Confederation said as many as 4,000
workers might die on building sites before the tournament kicks off.
Qatar has
dismissed that report as full of “factual errors” and published a list of
guidelines aimed at protecting the rights of the expatriate workers.
It is
against this background that competition in the “Workers Cup” began this month
for the second year running, as 24 teams started squaring off until two of them
reach the April 25 finals seeking a grand prize of 18,000 riyals ($5,000).
The
players, Asians and Africans mostly, are all migrant workers employed by
construction companies, said Adil Ahmed, managing director of organizers
QSports.
“We wanted
to bring a program that the workers can actually call their own,” Ahmed told
AFP.
On Friday
FIFA accepted “some responsibility” over the welfare of migrant workers but its
president Sepp Blatter told a Zurich news conference the football federation
was powerless to intervene.
Agence France-Presse
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