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Posted

As long has he's bought enough votes to stay in power, no-one is getting rid of him. Platini's doing the same in UEFA and obviously wants his job.

They're all scum-sucking bottom feeders.

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Posted

the last FIFA election had only one name on the ballot paper, blatter, joseph s. he's got too much dirt on his rivals for any of them to genuinely challenge him. he'll die in the job.

Posted

the last FIFA election had only one name on the ballot paper, blatter, joseph s. he's got too much dirt on his rivals for any of them to genuinely challenge him. he'll die in the job.

Hopefully sooner rather than later.

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

Strange that FIFA decided after the play off games NOT to put France in pot TWO isn't it.

Hope your not suggestin anything untoward from Platini laugh.png

The whole bladdy draw process is nuts anyway.

  • 1 month later...
Posted

this probably might as well go in this thread. but this is proper sickening stuff this. i despise FIFA and what they have done to this game.

Qatar World Cup: 185 Nepalese died in 2013 – official records
Death toll in 2013 likely to rise as new cases revealed, sparking fresh wave of concern over treatment of migrant workers

The extent of the risks faced by migrant construction workers building the infrastructure for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar has been laid bare by official documents revealing that 185 Nepalese men died last year alone.

The 2013 death toll, which is expected to rise as new cases come to light, is likely to spark fresh concern over the treatment of migrant workers in Qatar and increase the pressure on Fifa to force meaningful change. According to the documents the total number of verified deaths among workers from Nepal – just one of several countries that supply hundreds of thousands of migrant workers to the gas-rich state – is now at least 382 in two years alone. At least 36 of those deaths were registered in the weeks following the global outcry after the Guardian's original revelations in September.

The revelations forced Fifa's president, Sepp Blatter, to promise that football would not turn a blind eye to the issue following a stormy executive committee meeting. Qatar's ministry of labour hired law firm DLA Piper to conduct an urgent review and Hassan al-Thawadi, chief executive of the World Cup organising committee, said the findings would be treated with the utmost seriousness, vowing that the tournament would not be built "on the blood of innocents". The DLA Piper report is expected to be published in the coming weeks.

The Nepalese make up about a sixth of Qatar's 2 million-strong population of migrant workers. Verified figures for the 2013 death rates among those from India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka and elsewhere have yet to emerge.

The Nepalese organisation working with the families of dead workers to repatriate their bodies and campaign for adequate compensation from the companies that employed them under the kafala sponsorship system said on Friday that Fifa should do more.

The Pravasi Nepali Co-ordination Committee (PNCC), which has cross-checked the figures from official sources in Doha against death certificates and passports, is still receiving new cases on a regular basis. The Guardian has seen evidence of at least a further eight cases, which would take the 2013 total to 193.

The PNCC called on Fifa's sponsors to reconsider their relationship with world football's governing body, which awarded the World Cup to Qatar in December 2010.

"Fifa and the government of Qatar promised the world that they would take action to ensure the safety of workers building the stadiums and infrastructure for the 2022 World Cup. This horrendous roll call of the dead gives the lie to those reassurances," said the PNCC. "These were young or otherwise able-bodied men, with their futures in front of them, families at home and everything to live for. Many have been literally worked to death. Some have met with even more sinister ends. All have been betrayed by Fifa."

The Guardian investigation last year revealed that at least 44 Nepalese workers had died in Qatar between 4 June and 8 August, more than half of them of heart attacks, heart failure or workplace accidents. But the full list of deaths recorded during the year, collated by the Nepalese NGO from official sources and documents in Doha and seen by the Guardian, shows that the actual figure is much higher.

In June, July and August alone 65 deaths were recorded by the PNCC during summer months when temperatures can regularly top 40C. The causes included traffic accidents, blunt injuries and fractures ascribed to falls and suicide. But more than 65 of the deaths in 2013 are ascribed to "sudden cardiac arrests" and more than half to some kind of heart failure. Campaigners believe the cause of death is often officially listed as a cardiac arrest because it covers a "multitude of sins".

Asked last year by the Guardian why so many young Nepalese men died of heart attacks, the Qatari labour ministry said: "This question would be better suited for the relevant health authorities or the government of Nepal."

As long ago as 2011, Fifa said it would work with the International Trade Union Confederation to address labour issues with the Qatari authorities. "We have a responsibility that goes beyond the development of football and the organisation of our competition," Fifa secretary general Jérôme Valcke said in November 2011.

But the ITUC has remained a strident critic of the lack of progress made by Qatari authorities on the issue, while groups including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have continued to highlight the appalling conditions suffered by some of the workers in a £137bn construction boom.

In November, Amnesty warned in a damning report that workers were enduring 12-hour days in sweltering conditions and living in squalid, overcrowded accommodation. The ITUC has warned that up to 4,000 workers may die before a ball is kicked in 2022 without meaningful reform of the kafala system and stringent control of the myriad construction companies and sub-contractors involved.

After the global outcry that followed the Guardian's coverage, Blatter travelled to meet the Emir of Qatar and declared it was "on the right track" in dealing with the issue. But following a meeting with the ITUC in Zurich a month later, Fifa said that "fair working conditions with a lasting effect must be introduced quickly".

The PNCC, which has painstakingly cross-checked death certificates and other documentation with official records in Doha, said Fifa and the Qatari government needed to move faster: "Fifa president Sepp Blatter said in October there was 'plenty of time' to address this issue. For the labourers dying every week in Qatar to build the infrastructure to host Mr Blatter's World Cup, there is no time left."

Attention is also turning to the role of Fifa's sponsors, with the PNCC joining calls for them to review their relationship with it. Visa and Adidas recently signed new deals until 2022. "Qatar's failure to disclose or explain these deaths, and Fifa's failure to monitor them, are alarming in the extreme. We call upon the World Cup's corporate sponsors – Coca-Cola, Adidas, Visa, Hyundai and Budweiser – urgently to review their arrangements with Fifa," a spokesman said.

Last month the London mayor, Boris Johnson, travelled to Doha to drum up trade for British business. Foreign Office minister Hugh Robertson held talks with the Qataris aimed at boosting trade and said the UK would "offer support" in delivering the 2022 World Cup.

A spokesman for the Foreign Office insisted the issue of migrant workers was also raised. "Mr Robertson discussed the issue of migrant workers with the Qatari authorities during his recent visit," he said."

But the PNCC said that the flow of coffins returning to Kathmandu airport, which continued throughout December, even on Christmas Day, told its own story. "Thanks to the work of the Guardian and other media, this abuse is finally being exposed," said the PNCC spokesman.

"We call upon civilised governments as a matter of the greatest urgency to demand that Qatar takes meaningful action to protect foreign workers on its soil – including reform of the kafala system of labour, which encourages employers to treat their workers as property rather than human beings."

The full list of deaths recorded between January and September 2012, also seen by the Guardian, shows that at least 127 Nepalese nationals died during that period and there are believed to have been at least another 70 fatalities during the final three months of that year.

Qatar is spending huge sums at home and abroad in an attempt to position itself as the diplomatic and business hub of the Middle East and secure its position politically and financially for the years ahead.

Qatari officials insist moves are being made to hold construction companies, and their myriad sub-contractors, to existing labour laws, which they argue are among the strongest in the region.

Qatar's under-secretary to the ministry of labour, Hussain al-Mulla, has said that at least 99% of businesses are complying with the law. The ministry of labour says it is "committed to ensuring that all workers are treated in a fair and just manner".

The Qatar 2022 supreme committee, which is responsible for staging the World Cup and recently began work on its first stadium, pointed to its own workers' charter and said it was "committed to the wellbeing, health, safety, security and dignity of every worker".

"We anticipate 2014 being a big year for the supreme committee in terms of delivery, with up to five stadiums in various stages of construction. With this in mind, and as an evolution of the charter, we have worked hard to develop detailed workers' standards which will be enforced across all Qatar 2022 projects," a Qatar 2022 statement said.

"It has been our commitment and our belief from the first day of our bid to host the Fifa World Cup that we can utilise the power of football to accelerate positive social and human development across our country and our region."

In a statement Fifa said: "Fifa is working towards an urgent solution and as such is continuing to actively engage the dialogue between Qatar and various human rights and labour organisations to ensure that the initiated changes to improve the welfare of migrants workers are progressing with the necessary pace.

"The application of international norms of behaviour is a principle and part of all our activities and expected from any host of our events.

"Fifa firmly believes in the positive power that the Fifa World Cup can have in Qatar as a platform for positive social change, including an improvement of labour rights and conditions for migrant workers."

Posted

qatar now owns PSG (including a 200m a year sponsorship deal with the qatar tourist authority), sponsors barcelona at 100m for 3 years, owns french football broadcast rights for the next six years, bought the london olympic village, the shard and harrods, and having been awarded the 2022 world cup is using migrant slave labour to deliver on it and they're dying in droves. makes me sick. FIFA are a <deleted> disgrace.

  • 3 months later...
Posted

it was a mistake. so that's all alright then.

Qatar World Cup 2022: Sepp Blatter admits it was a mistake to host tournament in the Middle East
Fifa president says "one makes a lot of mistakes in life" amid concerns over searing temperatures in Qatar

http://www.telegraph...iddle-East.html

Fifa president Sepp Blatter has admitted it was a mistake to choose Qatar to host the 2022 World Cup amid concerns over the country's searing climate.

Temperatures in the Arab state can reach 50 degrees in the summer months and it is believed the tournament will be moved to the winter to avoid matches taking place in such heat.

When asked, in an interview with Swiss TV channel RTS, if it was an error to award Qatar the World Cup, Blatter said: "Of course, it was a mistake. You know, one makes a lot of mistakes in life.

"The technical report indicated clearly that it was too hot in summer, but despite that the executive committee decided with quite a big majority that the tournament would be in Qatar."

Fifa's secretary general Jerome Valcke has previously said the tournament will not be held from June to July, suggesting instead that it take place "between November 15 and January 15 at the latest".

Posted

I just hope next year that UEFA tell them to shove it up their <deleted> and move it to a nation where it can be played in the summer.

They can't play it without the European clubs, they are the big earners.

Otherwise it's going to wreak havoc with all the leagues and the summer sports.

Posted

over 500 indian migrant workers have already died. it's already cost about $5 billion. but sepp says it was a mistake, like losing your car keys. he's <deleted> insane.

Posted

Blatter admits his mistake about WC in Qatar...."Saudi Arabia actually paid the biggest bribe but they all look alike to me."

Posted

How can it be so blatantly obvious bribery was involved on a massive scale yet absolutely nothing is done????

Beggars belief

Posted

How can it be so blatantly obvious bribery was involved on a massive scale yet absolutely nothing is done????

Beggars belief

because FIFA are answerable and accountable to absolutely nobody. a charity based in switzerland sitting on billions of dollars that they've made off world cups and fans. it's a disgrace but who is going to stop them? everyone in the game is on the same gravy train.

Posted

How can it be so blatantly obvious bribery was involved on a massive scale yet absolutely nothing is done????

Beggars belief

because FIFA are answerable and accountable to absolutely nobody. a charity based in switzerland sitting on billions of dollars that they've made off world cups and fans. it's a disgrace but who is going to stop them? everyone in the game is on the same gravy train.

That is disgraceful, there needs to be some sort of an independent regulatory committee.

It really takes the pish that this lot now come out and admit Qatar is a mistake. Essentially they new this from the very beginning, but decided the money was too good to refuse. Once awarded, let the fuss die down then in a couple of years admit they were wrong. All monies are in, paid in full and laundered beyond trace. The Qataris must be spitting sand!

Posted

How can it be so blatantly obvious bribery was involved on a massive scale yet absolutely nothing is done????

Beggars belief

because FIFA are answerable and accountable to absolutely nobody. a charity based in switzerland sitting on billions of dollars that they've made off world cups and fans. it's a disgrace but who is going to stop them? everyone in the game is on the same gravy train.

That is disgraceful, there needs to be some sort of an independent regulatory committee.

It really takes the pish that this lot now come out and admit Qatar is a mistake. Essentially they new this from the very beginning, but decided the money was too good to refuse. Once awarded, let the fuss die down then in a couple of years admit they were wrong. All monies are in, paid in full and laundered beyond trace. The Qataris must be spitting sand!

Its just a fine example of world hypocrisy. Everyone knows that Blatter and FIFA is totally corrupt, takes bribes, back handers whatever and yet everyone still plays along pretending its not the reality. Remember that tit Beckham looking so awfully pished off when we were seemingly double crossed in our bid and thinking how could he not realize it was always going to go to the biggest bribe. Same i reckon from Russia and quite possibly Brazil, who have neglected improved living standards for their own people to hold a world cup and olympics they cannot afford.

Posted (edited)

How can it be so blatantly obvious bribery was involved on a massive scale yet absolutely nothing is done????

Beggars belief

because FIFA are answerable and accountable to absolutely nobody. a charity based in switzerland sitting on billions of dollars that they've made off world cups and fans. it's a disgrace but who is going to stop them? everyone in the game is on the same gravy train.

That is disgraceful, there needs to be some sort of an independent regulatory committee.

It really takes the pish that this lot now come out and admit Qatar is a mistake. Essentially they new this from the very beginning, but decided the money was too good to refuse. Once awarded, let the fuss die down then in a couple of years admit they were wrong. All monies are in, paid in full and laundered beyond trace. The Qataris must be spitting sand!

Its just a fine example of world hypocrisy. Everyone knows that Blatter and FIFA is totally corrupt, takes bribes, back handers whatever and yet everyone still plays along pretending its not the reality. Remember that tit Beckham looking so awfully pished off when we were seemingly double crossed in our bid and thinking how could he not realize it was always going to go to the biggest bribe. Same i reckon from Russia and quite possibly Brazil, who have neglected improved living standards for their own people to hold a world cup and olympics they cannot afford.

I was shocked when Qatar won it, i just could not fathom how anyone in their right mind could consider the place a viable option. I didn't realise until then how corrupt these cats are. To think these are the same people handing out fines and punishment to clubs in the sport is nauseating.

I expect Russia for sure paid it's way, corruption is engrained in their culture. I guess you could suspect any country where bribery is part of business culture got the vote over the years.

Edited by BangrakBob
Posted

The award to Qatar was a fine example of Blatters utter contempt for everyone. Its also an example of how corrupt and out of control his organization is and how it behaves with total impunity. Its amazing how this situation with FIFA and its control has come about.

Posted

The award to Qatar was a fine example of Blatters utter contempt for everyone. Its also an example of how corrupt and out of control his organization is and how it behaves with total impunity. Its amazing how this situation with FIFA and its control has come about.

Come about? It was just as corrupt under his mentor and predecessor.

The Olympics are as bent as a 90 baht note as well.

Posted

The award to Qatar was a fine example of Blatters utter contempt for everyone. Its also an example of how corrupt and out of control his organization is and how it behaves with total impunity. Its amazing how this situation with FIFA and its control has come about.

Come about? It was just as corrupt under his mentor and predecessor.

The Olympics are as bent as a 90 baht note as well.

Didn't say it wasn't. Blatter though is relevant to the current situation.

Posted

The award to Qatar was a fine example of Blatters utter contempt for everyone. Its also an example of how corrupt and out of control his organization is and how it behaves with total impunity. Its amazing how this situation with FIFA and its control has come about.

Come about? It was just as corrupt under his mentor and predecessor.

The Olympics are as bent as a 90 baht note as well.

Didn't say it wasn't. Blatter though is relevant to the current situation.

No but you said "It's amazing how this situation... has come about".

It's been like it since Havelange was in charge. And don't forget how Blatter got elected over Johannson.

Blatter's 2002 candidacy has been marked with rumours of financial irregularities and backroom dealings, culminating with direct accusations of bribery, by a third party, made in the British press by Farra Ado, vice-president of the Confederation of African Football and president of the Somali Football Federation, who claimed to have been offered $100,000 to vote for Blatter in 1998.
Posted

Didn't Blatter vote against Qatar getting the WC?

Even if he did it would only have been because he knew everyone else who got a brown envelope.

Posted

Didn't Blatter vote against Qatar getting the WC?

Even if he did it would only have been because he knew everyone else who got a brown envelope.

The best crims get others to do their dirty work...

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted

Blatter's now come out with some drivel about how he knew all about it, but it wasn't illegal at the time !

Personally I think corruption is still rife at FIFA, it's the only possible explanation of why Qatar and Russia got the World Cup Finals.

WHY NOT RUSSIA?

Posted

Blatter's now come out with some drivel about how he knew all about it, but it wasn't illegal at the time !

Personally I think corruption is still rife at FIFA, it's the only possible explanation of why Qatar and Russia got the World Cup Finals.

WHY NOT RUSSIA?

As far as facilities, good summer weather, boozers and errm fine women are concerned you are dead right!

Posted (edited)

Blatter's now come out with some drivel about how he knew all about it, but it wasn't illegal at the time !

Personally I think corruption is still rife at FIFA, it's the only possible explanation of why Qatar and Russia got the World Cup Finals.

WHY NOT RUSSIA?

Well Vladimir Putin, that well known champion of democracy and free speech, was so confident of winning the 2018 vote he didn't even bother turning up for the grand announcement. He was clearly very confident of winning it. just like Qatar, they bought itlaugh.png

btw, there are quite a few million Ukrainians that could offer you some reasons why this old school soviet KGB bloke should not be allowed to host any event until they stop invading their neighbors and behaving any like the regional bully.

Edited by carmine

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