DOHA: Qatar staged the draw on Tuesday for the Arab Cup tournament this winter which will serve as a key test of the country's readiness for the 2022 World Cup. The event in an opera house in the Qatari capital Doha saw a much-reduced field of officials and regional football legends rubbing shoulders amid tight virus prevention measures. "(It) will be a fantastic event -- the first of many, the first FIFA Arab Cup... as an event to prepare for the World Cup, as an event to unite the Arab World," said FIFA president Gianni Infantino ahead of the draw. "Everything is almost ready."
The tournament, which will see 23 teams vie to be Arab champions, will be staged until December 18 at six of the eight stadiums which will host games in 2022. "This is the main test event for us prior to the World Cup in 2022," said World Cup 2022 chief executive Nasser Al-Khater. "At previous editions of the World Cup the Confederations Cup which had eight teams was their main test event, this will have 23."
So far Qatar has inaugurated three new venues and one refurbished ground with four still to open. Khater said two would be inaugurated before December. The 14 lowest-ranked teams according to the April edition of the FIFA world rankings will participate in single-leg playoffs ahead of the tournament. Only a handful of selected guests were flown in for the draw and were required to undergo coronavirus tests and stay in a bio-secure bubble ahead of the event. Qatar national team coach Felix Sanchez said "this is a tournament Qatar is ready to deal with -- they have all the stadiums, all the logistics that they need".
While FIFA has insisted the World Cup will be played in full stadiums, the virus prevention measures for this year's event have not yet been disclosed. "We really want to host the tournaments with the full return of fans. We hope the medical world will get us back to that stage by the end of the year," Khater added. "We're ready for any eventuality."
Whirlwind of criticism
Qatar has suffered a whirlwind of criticism over its rights record and efforts to improve treatment of workers in recent months. Several European teams staged protests ahead of their qualifiers for the 2022 tournament, with the Danish football federation calling on FIFA to probe worker deaths.
The issue of worker deaths is ultra-sensitive in Qatar which disputed media reports of avoidable deaths among migrant laborers who are predominantly from South Asia. Campaigners regularly accuse employers of exploitation and forcing laborers to work in dangerous conditions. Qatari authorities insist they have done more than any country in the region to improve worker welfare.
"In relation to Qatar, and as confirmed by the International Labor Organization and many others, the (tournament) has already now contributed significantly to the transformation of the labor rights situation there," FIFA said in a statement.
"Important legal changes (are) being implemented by the Qatari authorities. Since construction began in 2014, FIFA's local partner, the Supreme Committee, has recorded three work-related fatalities on FIFA World Cup sites and 35 non-work-related deaths among its workforce." The numbers do not include worker fatalities on projects not directly supervised by the World Cup organizers which have not been disclosed publicly. - AFP