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FIFA gets formal complaint of human rights oversight failure with 2034 World Cup host Saudi Arabia

FIFA gets formal complaint of human rights oversight failure with 2034 World Cup host Saudi Arabia

GENEVA (AP) — A group of international lawyers filed a formal complaint to FIFA on Thursday claiming the soccer body is failing to uphold its human rights policy with 2034 World Cup host Saudi Arabia.
The filing using FIFA's own online portal for grievance reporting was made by FIFA's
former anti-corruption adviser
Mark Pieth, Swiss lawyer Stefan Wehrenberg and British barrister Rodney Dixon.
Their
offers to advise FIFA
on human rights compliance were ignored before Saudi Arabia was confirmed last December as the 2034 host by acclamation without a rival bidder.
'As highlighted in this complaint, widespread
human rights abuses
continue to be perpetrated in Saudi Arabia, and no steps are being taken by FIFA to address these in the buildup to the World Cup,' the lawyers state in a 30-page document.
'Instead, it appears it is business as usual with no changes to be made,' the complaint said hours before FIFA opens its first annual congress of 211 member federations since the Saudi hosting win in an online meeting.
FIFA president Gianni Infantino was due for an
unprecedented last-minute arrival
at the congress in Paraguay after joining U.S. President Donald Trump on a
state visit to Saudi Arabia
. The oil-rich kingdom has repeatedly said it is increasing freedoms as part of the Vision 2030 program to modernize its society and economy.
Infantino has tied
FIFA's finances
and politics
closer to Saudi's de facto ruler
, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, since before the 2018 World Cup.
Infantino and Trump then had meetings on Wednesday in neighboring Qatar, the 2022 World Cup host which faced a decade of intense scrutiny for its human rights record and treatment of migrant workers needed to build stadiums and infrastructure for the tournament.
Saudi Arabia has begun a similarly massive construction program for the 2034 tournament which has more teams, more games and
needs more stadiums
which include
designs more extravagant
than the eight used in Qatar.
'Saudi Arabia has been chosen as the next host country despite its appalling human rights record, including violations relating to freedom of expression, arbitrary arrest, detention and mistreatment, migrants' rights and women's rights,' the lawyers' complaint said.
FIFA's human rights policy
was published in 2017 mandating bidders for the men's 2026 World Cup — being co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico — to'respecting international human rights and labor standards according to the United Nations' guiding principles.'
In a recent letter to Human Rights Watch, which this week
detailed alleged abuses of migrant workers
in Saudi Arabia, FIFA stated its 'steadfast commitment to the protection and promotion of human rights in the context of its operations.'
The lawyers' complaint urges FIFA to see 'there remains an opportunity for meaningful reforms in Saudi Arabia, driven by the implementation of FIFA's obligations under its policy.'
___
AP soccer:
https://apnews.com/hub/soccer

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