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ZombieHorde

(29,047 posts)
Tue Jun 24, 2014, 09:32 PM Jun 2014

Brazil forcibly displaced thousands of people to make way for the World Cup

Like millions of people around the world, I am enjoying watching the World Cup. Unfortunately, this otherwise great sports event has a terrible dark side: In order to construct the necessary facilities, the Brazilian government forcibly displaced thousands of people. This recent article by Brazilian-based architect Anthony Ling cites estimates indicating that some 250,000 people have been evicted from their homes:

Who would ever think that something as beautiful as a soccer championship could be destructive? The World Cup has become a social and public policy disaster for Brazil….

The attempt to produce a “legacy” does not only have a financial cost, but also an invaluable social cost, possibly the largest loss of all generated by the World Cup. Research done by NGOs such as ANCOP and Conectas estimates that around 250 thousand people will be evicted from their homes because of new public works related to the event.


http://www.washingtonpost.com/news/volokh-conspiracy/wp/2014/06/18/brazil-forcibly-displaced-thousands-of-people-to-make-way-for-the-world-cup/
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Brazil forcibly displaced thousands of people to make way for the World Cup (Original Post) ZombieHorde Jun 2014 OP
Unfortunately, it seems to've turned into yet another Capitalist horror show. nt. delrem Jun 2014 #1
Once the World Cup is over, SwankyXomb Jun 2014 #2
Really, really sad to hear. TDale313 Jun 2014 #3
Then this is for you, kiva Jun 2014 #4
Thank you for posting that! TDale313 Jun 2014 #6
You're welcome! kiva Jun 2014 #10
And if you think it's bad this year in Brazil, kiva Jun 2014 #5
However, Qatar is among "The Axis of Good". delrem Jun 2014 #7
Holy shit. That is beyond appalling. nomorenomore08 Jun 2014 #8
Yeah, it really is. n/t TDale313 Jun 2014 #9

TDale313

(7,820 posts)
3. Really, really sad to hear.
Tue Jun 24, 2014, 09:50 PM
Jun 2014

I've been one of those who has been really enjoying it this year. I think there is something fairly special about the international draw of this event/sport. But like the Olympics, the commercialism and sheer logistics often mean that the people who live in the places where these things get hosted often suffer. Very mixed feelings/bag.

kiva

(4,373 posts)
5. And if you think it's bad this year in Brazil,
Tue Jun 24, 2014, 10:06 PM
Jun 2014

just wait for 2022...oh wait, we don't need to because the death toll has already begun:

The 2014 World Cup is just one month away, but it’s not too early to start feeling intense emotions about the 2022 World Cup. Specifically, fury. That’s the feeling I left with after watching ESPN’s excellent E:60 documentary on the human rights disaster that’s unfolding eight years ahead of the Qatar World Cup.

From the opening shots of a small, red coffin carrying a young migrant worker, E:60: Trapped in Qatar is a gut punch. In addition to interviewing widows of Nepalese migrant workers, reporter Jeremy Schaap travelled to Qatar and took unauthorized cameras to see laborers’ cramped, squalid living conditions. Previous journalists had been detained by police for attempting to film in these dilapidated housing projects.

Those terrible images and individual interviews with grieving family members would be infuriating enough, but then the documentary goes into the actual numbers. Because Qatar has such a tiny population—the country has only about 280,000 citizens—and the World Cup is such a large project, most of the work to build the infrastructure and eight to 12 state-of-the-art stadiums will be carried out by the country’s 1.4 million migrant workers. In the past year alone, according to ESPN, 184 Nepali migrant workers have died, mainly from “sudden cardiac death” caused by terrible working conditions and extreme heat. The Nepalese embassy in Qatar, meanwhile, says 400 workers had died on World Cup projects since 2010. And that’s just the Nepalis.


http://www.slate.com/blogs/the_world_/2014/05/14/qatar_world_cup_migrant_worker_abuses_fifa_needs_to_do_something_about_the.html

delrem

(9,688 posts)
7. However, Qatar is among "The Axis of Good".
Tue Jun 24, 2014, 10:59 PM
Jun 2014

It is, like Saudi Arabia, sacred ground for the MSM's intrepid journalists.

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