FIFA, Qatar team up with WHO for World Cup health promotion

The move follows years of scrutiny on Qatar and criticism of conditions for hundreds of thousands of migrant workers needed for massive projects tied to the tournament.

Published : Oct 18, 2021 22:26 IST

Qatari minister of public health Hanan Mohamed Al Kuwari (left) and WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus pose after signing a multiyear partnership with Qatar on making the FIFA Football World Cup 2022 and mega sporting events healthy and safe.
Qatari minister of public health Hanan Mohamed Al Kuwari (left) and WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus pose after signing a multiyear partnership with Qatar on making the FIFA Football World Cup 2022 and mega sporting events healthy and safe.
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Qatari minister of public health Hanan Mohamed Al Kuwari (left) and WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus pose after signing a multiyear partnership with Qatar on making the FIFA Football World Cup 2022 and mega sporting events healthy and safe.

FIFA and the organisers of next year's World Cup in Qatar have teamed up with the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Monday to use football’s marquee event for promoting public health.

The move follows years of scrutiny on Qatar and criticism of conditions for hundreds of thousands of migrant workers needed for massive projects tied to the tournament.

“Events like the World Cup and the Olympic Games are perfect partners for promoting health and solidarity,” WHO director general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said.

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When FIFA picked Qatar in 2010 to host the World Cup, the expected health risk was exposing 32 teams of players, thousands of workers and hundreds of thousands of fans to 40-plus Celsius (100-plus Fahrenheit) heat in June and July.

Though that issue was solved by moving the games to cooler November temperatures, the coronavirus pandemic is moving into a third year and closer to key tournament preparations.

“The tournament is likely to be the first global mass gathering of this scale since the spread of the pandemic,” Hassan al-Thawadi, the head of the Qatari World Cup organising committee, said at tje WHO headquarters.

No details were given Monday of practical planning to protect the World Cup from COVID-19, and no questions were taken at the launch broadcast from Geneva.

Vaccine mandates for visiting fans to enter stadiums was the official Qatari policy four months ago. Officials have since moved to a more flexible approach, which is expected to be tested one year ahead of the World Cup when Qatar hosts the 16-nation Arab Cup on November 30.

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WHO officials on Monday praised Qatar and FIFA for their financial and practical contributions. Qatar was a “top 10 voluntary donor” last year, WHO regional director Ahmed Al-Mandhari said.

Tedros described Qatari support as “critical to our work” and noted two flights it recently provided to take medical supplies to Afghanistan.

FIFA made a $10 million donation to WHO last year, and FIFA president Gianni Infantino said in a video message Monday the state of Qatar was committed to “the safest World Cup ever.” The “Healthy 2022 World Cup” aims to create a legacy for future major sporting events, including the 2026 tournament to be hosted by the United States, Canada and Mexico.

The launch included signing Ivory Coast great Didier Drogba as a WHO goodwill ambassador to promote a healthier lifestyle. “May we unite to be better prepared,” Drogba said, “and respond to future pandemics more collaboratively as we seek to tell the WHO narrative to global audiences in languages and platforms that are accessible to all.”

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