Sunday 9 March 2014

FIFA-The not so beautiful game


FIFA and their head honcho Sepp Blatter are no strangers to controversy. Wherever Blatter raises his head trouble is always close by, be it homophobic comments, his controversial view on racial abuse or the countless accusations of bribery Blatter is never too far from the limelight.

His running of FIFA has transformed the organisation from an already untrustworthy organisation into a downright corrupt circus. As if their reputation had not been tarnished enough in recent years, the latest farce of awarding the staging of the 2022 World Cup Tournament to oil rich Qatar was the final straw for many people.

People may not be happy, but in time would come to understand, if the World Cup had been awarded to a developing country that is football mad. However to award the tournament to a country that boasts a national team that would struggle to compete in the league of Ireland and whose interest in football rivals the Irish publics in cricket is an absolute farce.

But wait, that’s not even the worst bit, FIFA have awarded the World Cup to a country who treats migrant workers, those constructing the stadiums for the tournament, like slaves, with reports of 18 hour shifts, the confiscation of passports, and worst of all, on site deaths due to lack of safety and extreme exhaustion. I’m sorry Mr Blatter and Co but the reek of bribery emanating from the sealing handshake could be smelt in every corner of the globe.

Qatar is having to build everything it needs for the tournament, from stadiums to hotels, from scratch and is spending $100bn on the project. The Guardian newspaper recently conducted a surveillance project in the region and uncovered evidence of forced labour and conditions amounting to slavery on the huge infrastructure project. "The overall picture is of one of the richest nations exploiting one of the poorest to get ready for the world's most popular sporting tournament," said the paper.

If you need more convincing all you need to do is take a look at the comments from Blatter himself in the wake of the announcement. From the second the announcement was made allegations of wrong-doing, bribes and backroom deals surfaced. A whistle-blower from within the Qatari bid team came forward with claims of corruption, but later recanted.

But three years after the vote Blatter himself, bizarrely revealed to a German magazine there had been "direct political influence" in the vote. Why? Because some countries had major economic interests in the country, he claimed.

The final concrete piece of evidence is the case of former FIFA board member Mohammed Bin Hammam. Within months of being awarded the 2022 World Cup, Qatar's representative on FIFA’s executive council, Bin Hammam, had been banned from the game for life in the wake of a huge corruption scandal revolving around the 2011 FIFA presidential elections.

Blatter is pictured here with the disgraced Mohammed Bin Hammam (right).
 Bin Hammam was the main challenger to Sepp Blatter, but his campaign came off the rails when he and several other high profile figures, including Jack Warner, president of the Caribbean Football Union were accused of trying to buy votes. Qatar insists Hammam was not involved in its World Cup bid, but his demise and more general allegations about how FIFA operates have done nothing to dispel the fog of suspicion around the decision.


Calls for the tournament to be boycotted will ultimately fall on deaf ears due to the amount of money at stake however isn’t it about time the respective FA’s of Europe at least hold Blatter and Co responsible for bringing the game into disrepute and effectively turning it into a corrupt business primarily concerned with profit?

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