FIFA troubles will 'not impact' on 2022 World Cup preparations: Qatar

FIFA troubles will 'not impact' on 2022 World Cup preparations: Qatar

DOHA - Qatar's World Cup football organisers said Wednesday that the recent dramatic events at FIFA would "not impact" on the country's preparations for its hosting of the controversial 2022 tournament.

A computer-generated image of the Al-Wakrah stadium which is being built for Qatar's 2022 World Cup

In its first direct statement about football's governing body since Tuesday's resignation of long-time president Sepp Blatter, the Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy said: "The recent events at FIFA will not impact on our preparations for the 2022 FIFA World Cup."

The committee said it was "ahead of schedule" as work had already begun on five of the stadiums which will be used during the tournament.

It also added that it was used to attacks on its hosting of the World Cup.

"Qatar has faced criticism from the moment we won the right to bring this tournament to the Middle East for the first time.

"We remain committed to using the World Cup as a platform to break down prejudice and misconceptions, while leaving a lasting legacy for our country and the rest of the region."

Blatter's sensational resignation, together with the US graft probe and the Swiss authorities' investigation into corruption claims surrounding the bidding process for the 2022 World Cup, has led some to question whether Qatar will be stripped of the tournament.

English football boss Greg Dyke said Qatar should be nervous following Blatter's decision to stand down after 17 years in charge of FIFA.

Speaking on British television, Football Association chairman Dyke said: "If I was in Qatar, I wouldn't be very confident."

- 'Pathetic' -

Dyke's call was echoed by the International Trade Union Conference (ITUC).

A longtime critic of Qatar's labour practices, the ITUC said Blatter's resignation exposed Qatar to losing the tournament in seven years' time.

Sharan Burrow, ITUC General Secretary, said: "Qatar needs to wake up to the reality that the world will not accept a World Cup built on modern slavery."

However, Qatar has refuted these claims.

In response to Dyke, the head of Qatar's Football Association, Sheikh Hamad Bin Khalifa Bin Ahmed Al-Thani, told Dyke that Qatar had nothing to hide over its controversial bid.

"Mr Dyke's instinct to immediately focus on stripping Qatar of the World Cup speaks volumes on his views concerning what will be the first FIFA World Cup to take place in the Middle East," read the statement.

Dyke called Al-Thani's statement "pathetic" and added: "I think now that the Swiss authorities are investigating the process, we must wait until we've seen what happens," he said.

"If in the end they say it was a perfectly fair process, then of course it should go ahead, because there are contracts.

"But if it didn't, if they come out and say, as I suspect, that an awful lot of money was thrown at this and some of it went to people it shouldn't have gone to, then I do think it should be re-bid."

However, Qatar's foreign minister, Khalid Al-Attiyah, in an interview aired on French television on Wednesday said that his country had been the victim of "prejudice".

"Some entities, some countries, they don’t like to see an Arab state in the Middle East hosting a tournament as such for the Arab world," he told the France 24 channel.

"Qatar, when we started this bid, we didn't take this bid on our shoulders for Qatar, we took it for the whole Middle East."

He added the country would prove its innocence over the bid.

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