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Amnesty International UK PRESS RELEASE FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE TUESDAY 27 MAY 2014 ERIC CANTONA: BRAZIL HAS PRICED OUT REAL FANS AND QATAR SHOULD NEVER HAVE GOT THE WORLD CUP In an exclusive interview with Amnesty International Eric Cantona talks corruption, inequality and human rights abuses ahead of the Brazil World Cup Former Manchester United footballer Eric Cantona has spoken exclusively to Amnesty on the failures of the Brazilian government, corruption in FIFA and the extreme poverty that is pricing fans out of the World Cup. Cantona spoke ahead of the UK premiere of his new hour-long documentary ‘Looking for Rio’ which explores the complex relationship Rio has with football where government spending on the World Cup has forced Brazilians on the streets in protest. It will showcase at Amnesty’s first ever football film festival, Sidelines, in London on Saturday 7 June followed by an ‘in conversation’ with Eric Cantona and his brothers Joel and Jean-Marie, who together form the ‘Canto Bros’ production company behind the film. In response to the mass protests in Rio, the pricing out of Brazil’s poorest and the costly price of World Cup tickets, Cantona said: “The people don’t understand how it costs so much, and they are angry because they know that a lot of money have been taken through corruption and the costs also. Why is not spent the money for education, hospitals? “They cannot go anymore to the stadium because it is too expensive. So they don’t educate them, they just throw them away and bring people who can pay the tickets.” Qatar 2022 Cantona also went on to question FIFA’s decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar – a country which brazenly violates human rights in the widespread abuse of its migrant workers. Again, accusing FIFA of prioritising money over fans, he said: “I just cannot understand why they give the World Cup to Qatar if it is not for money. In giving the World Cup to Qatar they show the world that they don’t really care about the sport. “In Qatar there is no hope, because people from Qatar they don’t play football, 80% of the people, they work for the other ones, sleeping in - you know - like small areas, so many of them, some of them died, they work for those other ones.” Sidelines Amnesty’s first ever football film festival runs from Friday 6 - Sunday 8 June at Hackney Picturehouse and will be a celebration of thought-provoking films, lively Q&As and panel discussions, aimed at bringing the two worlds of football and human rights together. The festival is a partnership between Amnesty International UK, Picturehouse Cinemas and football quarterly The Blizzard. Other documentaries to be shown at the festival document the ups and downs of the Egyptian national side during the Arab Spring, the non-Jewish Ajax fans in the Netherlands who call themselves Jews, Spanish Civil War refugees who became the first Spaniards to play professional football in England and the Argentinian women players fighting for recognition by their families, friends, clubs and the country’s Football Association. Panel debates over the weekend will look at racism and homophobia in football, the responsibility major sports bodies have to challenge human rights abuses in host countries and women in football. For the full programme visit: amnesty.org.uk/issues/Sidelines%3A-Football-film-festival Interview with Eric Cantona: https://youtube/watch?v=KYaO-DCvfhI Festival trailer here: https://youtube/watch?v=zdWNKBrUP7Y What: Sidelines: Amnesty’s football film festival When: Friday 6 - Sunday 8 June 2014 Where: Hackney Picturehouse, 270 Mare St, London E8 1HE Notes to editors: To arrange an interview, please contact the Amnesty press office. ENDS Amnesty International UK media information: Meera Pattni: 020 7033 1548, [email protected] Naomi Westland: 0207 033 6414, [email protected] Out of hours: 07721 398984, amnesty.org.uk Follow us on Twitter: @Newsfromamnesty Follow our blog: blogs.amnesty.org/pressblog
Posted on: Tue, 27 May 2014 11:47:19 +0000

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