FIFA exec Theo Zwanziger has serious
doubts about the Qatar World Cup. (Getty Images)
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A FIFA executive committee member
said Monday that, when it's all said and done, Qatar will not host the 2022
World Cup.
"I personally think that in the
end the 2022 World Cup will not take place in Qatar," Theo Zwanziger told
German newspaper, Sport Bild, according to Reuters.
"Medics say that they cannot
accept responsibility with a World Cup taking place under these
conditions."
Officials in Qatar, noting the searing
temperatures, claim to have developed cooling technologies to keep players and
fans safe from the heat. This does not sway Zwanziger.
"They may be able to cool the
stadiums but a World Cup does not take place only there," Zwanziger said.
"Fans from around the world will be coming and traveling in this heat and
the first life-threatening case will trigger an investigation by a state
prosecutor.
"Fans from around the world
will be coming and travelling in this heat and the first life-threatening case
will trigger an investigation by a state prosecutor.
"That is not something that
FIFA Exco members want to answer for."
FIFA officials, contacted by
Reuters, said Zwanziger was not giving the view of the all powerful Executive
Committee.
"He is expressing a personal
opinion and he explicitly says so," FIFA spokewoman Delia Fischer said.
"We will not comment on a personal opinion."
FIFA President Sepp Blatter said in
May that awarding the World Cup to Qatar was a 'mistake' and the tournament would
probably have to be held in the European winter.
"Of course, it was a mistake.
You know, one comes across a lot of mistakes in life," he told Swiss
television station RTS in an interview at the time.
"The Qatar technical report
indicated clearly that it is too hot in summer, but the executive committee
with quite a big majority decided all the same that the tournament would be in
Qatar," he added.
FIFA is now looking to shift the
tournament to a European winter date to avoid the scorching summer where temperatures
routinely rise over 40 Celsius.
Asian Football Confederation (AFC)
president Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa chaired a meeting to discuss the
matter earlier this month with the options of January/February 2022 and
November/December 2022 offered as alternatives to June/July.
However, talk of a potential change
away from the usual dates has resulted in plenty of opposition from domestic
leagues around the world, worried the schedule switch would severely disrupt
them.
Both FIFA and Qatar World Cup organizers have
also been fending off questions of corruption ever since they were awarded the
tournament back in 2010, while Qatar has also been criticized for the
conditions provided for migrant workers' in the tiny Gulf state.
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