(Reuters) - Qatar remained adamant it would host the 2022
soccer World Cup despite a FIFA Executive Committee member suggesting on Monday
that the tournament would have to move because of scorching temperatures.
"The only question now is when, not if," Qatar
2022 communications director Nasser Al Khater said in a statement.
"Summer or winter, we will be ready."
Theo Zwanziger, the former German soccer association (DFB)
chief who now sits on the executive committee of world soccer's governing body,
had said earlier that he felt the tournament would have to be held elsewhere.
"I personally think that in the end the 2022 World Cup
will not take place in Qatar," he told Sport Bild. "Medics say that
they cannot accept responsibility with a World Cup taking place under these
conditions."
FIFA awarded the tournament to the tiny Middle Eastern
country in a controversial decision in 2010, with the understanding that it
would be held in the summer despite the searing heat.
Although oil and gas-rich Qatar has insisted that timetable
is viable thanks to cooling technologies being developed for stadiums, training
areas and fan zones, there is still widespread concern over the health of
players and visiting fans.
"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.
"That is not something that FIFA Exco members want to
answer for."
PERSONAL OPINION
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 spokeswoman Delia Fischer said. "We will not comment
on a personal opinion."
Qatar organizers said they have already proved that cooling
technologies that would be used at the World Cup work.
"We have proven that a FIFA World Cup in Qatar in the
summer is possible with state-of-the-art cooling technology," said Al
Khater.
"We have demonstrated that our cooling works in outdoor
areas beyond stadiums. This summer we welcomed fans in Doha to an open-air
Brazil 2014 Fan Zone with temperatures cooled to a comfortable 22 degrees
Celsius.
"The evolution of environmentally-friendly cooling
technologies is an important legacy for our nation, region and for countries
with similar climates - promising to expand the reach of hosting major sporting
events to countries where it was never thought possible before."
Despite the resources being thrown at high-tech cooling
techniques, skepticism about Qatar's ability to stage a World Cup in the summer
-- when temperatures can soar into the mid 40s Celsius -- has not gone away.
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.
"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 said.
FIFA is looking at the option of shifting the tournament to
January/February 2022 or November/December 2022 - both of which would be
unpopular because of disruption to the domestic seasons in Europe and around
the world.
Asian Football Confederation (AFC) president Sheikh Salman
Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa chaired a meeting to discuss the matter earlier this
month.
(Reporting by Karolos Grohmann. Editing by Patrick
Johnston/Alan Baldwin)
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