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Qatar rejects human rights concerns ahead of World Cup 2022 as 'slander'

Qatar's ruler said on Tuesday that criticism over his country's hosting of the FIFA World Cup was "slander". 

“Since we had the honour of hosting the World Cup, Qatar has been the target of an unprecedented campaign that no other host country has suffered,” said Emir Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani, leader of the tiny Gulf state. 

FIFA controversially awarded the 2022 World Cup to Qatar in 2010, with Qatar's rulers spending tens of billions of euros on the event which will take place from 20 November to 18 December.

The energy-rich, Middle Eastern country has been repeatedly criticised over the treatment of migrant workers, women and the LGBT+ community in the run-up to the World Cup, which is costing €6.84 billion.

On Monday, the NGO Human Rights Watch claimed that Qatar's security forces have arbitrarily arrested lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people, subjecting them to violence and ill-treatment in detention. 

On Tuesday, veteran UK-based activist Peter Tatchell was questioned by police after staging a protest over the country's treatment of the LGBT community in front of Qatar’s National Museum.

Qatar denied claims he was arrested and said the allegations were “completely false.”

Deaths, alleged exploitation and abuses of migrants -- mostly from South East Asia and East Africa -- working in construction are also under the spotlight of human rights organisations and the media. 

Qatar introduced labour protections and ended the kafala system, which prevents immigrant labourers from changing jobs, in response to these criticisms. 

But some observers have questioned the effectiveness of these changes, with the minimum wage amounting to just over €1 an hour and doubts whether reforms to the kafala system happened in

Read more on euronews.com