Qatar accused of building World Cup stadiums on land stolen from persecuted tribe

Qatar was accused of building stadiums for
the 2022 football World Cup on land stolen from a tribe it has persecuted for
more than 20 years.
A delegation from the Al-Ghufran tribe handed a
letter of protest to the game’s world governing body, FIFA, and demanded that
Qatar be stripped of the right to hold the tournament unless the tribe receives
justice.
“The World Cup is a gathering of people who come
together for the love of the game, honest competition, brotherhood and love and
respect among nations; how will Qatar play the role of supplying this when it
is so unfair to its own citizens?” a spokesman for the tribe said.
“The FIFA system states that the country where the
World Cup is held must respect and preserve human rights, but this is a country
that harms its own citizens and strips them of their rights, and then talks
about freedom and democracy.”
The tribe claim that land used for World Cup
stadiums was taken from them by force, and that sports facilities were built
illegally and illegitimately after the owners were thrown off the land and
stripped of their citizenship.
“The state resorted to every illegitimate method in
dealing with the Al-Ghufran tribe, from deprivation to expulsion from the
country, withdrawal of their official documents and denial of education and
health care,” the spokesman said.
The tribe’s ordeal began in 1996, when some of their
members voiced support for Sheikh Khalifa Al-Thani, the Qatari emir deposed the
previous year by his son Hamad, father of the current emir, Sheikh Tamim.
About 800 Al-Ghufran families, more than 6,000
people, were stripped of their citizenship and had their property confiscated.
Many remain stateless, both in Qatar and in neighboring Gulf countries.
A delegation from the tribe has been in Switzerland
for the past week, presenting their case to UN human rights officials in
Geneva.
They have asked the UN to stop Qatari authorities’
continuous and systematic discrimination against them, to protect the tribe’s
members and restore their lost rights, and to punish the Qatari regime for
human-rights violations.
A delegation from the tribe organized a demonstration
on Monday at the Broken Chair, a monumental wooden sculpture opposite the
Palace of Nations in Geneva that symbolises opposition to land mines and
cluster bombs.
“The international community must stop turning a
blind eye to the human rights violations committed against the Al-Ghufran tribe
by the Qatari regime,” said Mohamed Saleh Al-Ghafzani, a member of the
delegation.
“We are talking to everyone who comes in and out of
the United Nations building about our crisis and our stolen rights; after Qatar
took our nationality away, there is nothing else we can lose.”