European parliament calls on FIFA to contribute to migrant workers’ compensation

To optimise for archiving, the original image and related documents associated with this article have been removed.

Yesterday (Thursday 24 November), members of the European Parliament (MEPs) called on FIFA to contribute to a comprehensive compensation package for workers’ families for the working conditions they have suffered in the context of the preparation for the 2022 World Cup.

MEPs highlighted that the Gulf state won the FIFA World Cup bidding process amidst credible allegations of bribery and corruption. MEPs also deplored that the process to award the football World Cup to Qatar in 2010 was not transparent and lacked responsible risk-assessment, and underscored how FIFA has seriously damaged the image and integrity of global football.

While acknowledging recent labour reforms made by Qatar, the European Parliament’s resolution highlighted how an existing compensation scheme failed to compensate widespread wage abuse since the selection of Qatar as World Cup hosts. Furthermore, Qatari authorities’ hasty attribution of thousands of migrant workers’ deaths to “natural causes” without proper investigations made their families ineligible for compensation.

The parliament urged the Qatari authorities to conduct full investigations into the deaths of migrant workers in the country and to compensate to families in cases where workers died as a result of their working conditions.

The resolution also deplored reports of abuses of the LGBTQ+ community in Qatar and called on the country to decriminalize same-sex relations.

In a statement the Parliament said “EU countries, particularly those with large national football leagues, such as Germany, France, Italy, and Spain, to exert pressure on UEFA and FIFA to fundamentally reform FIFA. This would include introducing democratic and transparent procedures when awarding football World Cups and strictly implementing human rights and sustainability criteria for hosting countries.”

Please click here to view their statement. 

You may also like

View All

FIFA president to possibly expand 2030 World Cup to 64 teams

FIFA president, Gianni Infantino, will possibly expand this year’s 48-team World Cup tournament to 64 teams by 2030 

Read More

Job Opportunity: Case Manager (International)

Sport Resolutions has an exciting opportunity for an individual to join its skilled, diverse and experienced case management team to assist, primarily, with international referrals.

Read More

IOC provisionally lifts suspension of Russian Olympic Committee

The International Olympic Committee has provisionally lifted the suspension of the Russian Olympic Committee, which was implemented in 2023, since the Russian committee no longer has, as its members, any regional sports organisations in territories falling under the jurisdiction of the National Olympic Committee of Ukraine

Read More