Comments on: ConIFA football world cup in London sponsored by Paddy Powers https://mergueze.info/conifa-football-world-cup-in-london-sponsored-by-paddy-powers/ the kabylian voice Wed, 28 Mar 2018 08:52:05 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.2.2 By: Roger https://mergueze.info/conifa-football-world-cup-in-london-sponsored-by-paddy-powers/#comment-1668 Wed, 28 Mar 2018 08:52:05 +0000 https://mergueze.info/?p=14651#comment-1668 From Playing Games In Secret To Mammoth Away Trips – Why You Should Watch The CONIFA World Football Cup This Summer
By Trevor Murray
Thursday 15th March 2018

Murmurs of World Cup boycotts have gathered volume in recent weeks as fans have increasingly expressed concern about their safety in Russia come June – then, of course, there are the excessive working hours reportedly being experienced by site labourers in Qatar ahead of the 2022 edition in under four years’ time.

FIFA has long been linked with corruption; the ousting of former president Sepp Blatter back in 2015 gave supporters of the beautiful game hope that a new dawn was coming, but controversy is never far away – and the influence of money has led many to the conclusion that football has lost its innocence and purity across the board.

The increasingly commercialised nature of the game has quite simply turned a lot of people off.

For the football purists, however, CONIFA – the organisation that gives minnow nations cast aside by FIFA the chance to represent themselves on a global stage – should be looked to as an alternative option with its World Football Cup. It goes beyond technology, side-line pundits and slow-motion replays, to a side of the game we don’t see enough of.

Thanks to its broad reach which goes in search of hidden football gems, it shines a light on parts of the football community too many people know nothing about – like Kabylia, a region in northern Algeria that has had to fight oppression just to earn the right to represent their people in a football context.

“The Kabylia team had to play games in secret to avoid the Algerian police,” CONIFA director Paul Watson tells TheSportsman.

“Their president was arrested and held without charge for five days. Their team and management are having to hide from the secret police – all for playing the game they love,” Watson adds.

It might seem almost unfathomable that a team in this day and age would have to literally hide their playing activity from the authorities, but Kabylia are living proof of that.

“I hope London 2018 showcases the amazing cultures and identities that have been denied a voice through football,” says Watson.

It is the tenacity and hope in the face of persecution, however, that really stands out – and Kabylia are not the only team battling to overcome obstacles set to feature in the English capital come the end of May.


https://www.thesportsman.com/articles/from-playing-games-in-secret-to-mammoth-away-trips-why-you-should-watch-the-conifa-world-football-cup-this-summer

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