Sports
World Cup 2022: “You Don’t Get Results By Shouting!” FIFA President Slams Qatar’s Critics
The FIFA President has slammed the critics of Qatar, saying results are not achieved through shouting.
Eko Hot Blog reports that FIFA President Gianni Infantino has launched an extraordinary attack against critics of Qatar, the host country of the 2022 World Cup.
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Qatar has been widely criticised for its strict moral rules that affect the LGBT community and alcohol lovers.
In a remarkable press conference on Saturday—the eve of the tournament, which starts on Sunday—Infantino spent a lot of time defending FIFA’s decision in 2010 to award the World Cup to Qatar. The controversial decision was made when he wasn’t the football governing body’s president.
Although Infantino admitted that things weren’t perfect, he said some criticism was “profoundly unjust” and accused the West of double standards.
The Italian opened the news conference by speaking for an hour, telling journalists that he knew what it felt like to be discriminated against, saying he was bullied as a child for having red hair and freckles.
“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,” he said.
“I feel this, all this, because what I’ve been seeing and what I’ve been told, since I don’t read, otherwise I would be depressed I think.
“What I’ve seen brings me back to my personal story. I am a son of migrant workers. My parents were working very very hard in difficult situations.
Infantino said progress had been made in Qatar on a range of issues, but insisted real change takes time, adding that FIFA would not leave the country after the tournament finished.
“We need to invest in education, to give them a better future, to give them hope. We should all educate ourselves,” he said.
“Reform and change takes time. It took hundreds of years in our countries in Europe. It takes time everywhere, the only way to get results is by engaging […] not by shouting.”
Infantino also addressed questions around the last-minute decision to ban alcohol from being sold at the eight stadiums which will host the tournament’s 64 matches. In a FIFA statement issued on Friday, the governing body said alcohol would be sold at fan zones and licensed venues.
“Let me first assure you that every decision that is taken in this World Cup is a joint decision between Qatar and FIFA,” he said. “Every decision is discussed, debated and taken jointly.”
“There will be […] over 200 places where you can buy alcohol in Qatar and over 10 fan zones, where over 100,000 people can simultaneously drink alcohol.
“I think personally, if for three hours a day you cannot drink a beer, you will survive.
“Especially because actually the same rules apply in France or in Spain or in Portugal or in Scotland, where no beer is allowed in stadiums now.
“It seems to become a big thing because it’s a Muslim country, or I don’t know why.”
Infantino finished the press conference by insisting that everyone would be safe in Qatar, amid concerns from the LGBTQ community.
Homosexuality in Qatar is illegal and punishable by up to three years in prison, but the FIFA president promised that this is a tournament for everyone.
“Let me mention as well, the LGBT situation. I have been speaking about this topic with the highest leadership of the country several times, not just once. They have confirmed, and I can confirm, that everyone is welcome,” Infantino said.
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“This is a clear FIFA requirement. Everyone has to be welcomed, everyone that comes to Qatar is welcome whatever religion, race, sexual orientation, belief she or he has. Everyone is welcome. This was our requirement and the Qatari state sticks to that requirement.”
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