Business Insider published these 11 reasons.
Nine years before the 2022 Qatar World Cup, the country is being
criticized for everything from logistics to bribery to human rights abuses.
It's a burgeoning
disaster. Here's why.
The Guardian had a big report
this week about the mistreatment of Nepalese migrant workers in
Qatar. The workers — some of whom are working on the planned city which will
host the 2022 World Cup final — accused their employers of withholding pay,
forcing them to work in heat without water, making them live in squalid camps,
and confiscating their passports to keep them from leaving the country.
From June to August,
at least 44 Nepalese died in Qatar from working construction, the Guardian
reports.
2. It's 120 degrees in summer so they'll
probably have to play the tournament in winter.
During the bidding
process, Qatar said they would host the event in summer. Now pretty much everyone has
abandoned that idea, and FIFA could make it official soon.
3. Homosexuality is illegal there.
While Qatar has more
liberal policies than many Middle Eastern countries, it still has strict
anti-gay laws. FIFA president Sepp Blatter
recommended that gay men who want to go to the World Cup should
"refrain from any sexual activities."
4. There were widespread bribery allegations
during the bidding process.
An English lord said
that bribery was
everywhere when FIFA was deciding between England and Russia for the 2018 World
Cup and Qatar and the United States for the 2022 World Cup. He said
that one FIFA member asked the English for a knighthood, and another wanted a
$2.5 million school built in his native Trinidad & Tobago.
5. There are no stadiums.
6. Entire cities that are
necessary to host the event don't exist yet.
It will cost Qatar $220
billion to host the World Cup. They don't have the stadiums,
hotels, or infrastructure to the host the event, so they have to build it all
from scratch before 2022. By comparison, it cost South Africa $3.5 billion.
The city that will
host the final, Lusail City, doesn't exist yet.
7. The futuristic air-conditioned
stadiums that Qatar promised to build aren't actually possible.
Qatar promised to
build space-age stadiums that had unprecedented cooling technology so that the
event could be held during the summer. But after they won the bid, they
scrapped that plan. According to
ESPN, the architecture firm that will build the stadium
said "the system is too expensive and 'notoriously unsustainable' for
the environment when used on a large scale."
8. Playing it in winter will totally screw up
the European leagues.
For many of these
huge global stars, the club matters more than the country. While the World Cup
is a huge event, postponing the English, Spanish, and Italian leagues will be a
huge headache for everyone involved.
9. FIFA will have to renegotiate all the TV
contracts.
FIFA is holding
secret talks with television networks from across the world in case the World
Cup is moved to the winter, the Telegraph
reports. Fox paid a record $425 million for the next two tournaments
under the assumption that it would be played in summer and not clash with the
NFL.
10. It'll get drowned out by football
in America.
The World Cup is the
only time when mainstream America pays attention to soccer. If it has to
compete with the NFL it'd be a disaster, especially if it's held in January and
goes up against the playoffs.
11. They probably won't sell beer in the
stadiums.
There are select
hotels and bars in Doha where you're allowed to drink. But you can't have
alcohol or be drunk in public. It will be the most sober World Cup ever.
This story was originally published on Business Insider
Sorry World Cup 2022, they lost me at number 1 reason "They're allegedly using 'modern-day slavery' to build the infrastructure". I can't stomach that so count me out.
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