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STAFF are âworking day and nightâ in a desperate race against time to get Qatar ready for the World Cup kick-off next week.
A fresh report has claimed that âQatar has left it lateâ has left it late as they battle to get streets and fan zones ready for the start in 11 days.
And we reported ten days ago how Englandâs build-up is in a heap of rubble â with the team hotel a construction site less than a month before kick-off.
Now The Telegraph has provided an update as workers frantically put the âfinishing touches to fan zones and parts of the infrastructureâ around the capital Doha ahead of the World Cup – which was awarded amid huge shock and Fifa corruption 12 years ago.
They state that it looks like it âwill go right down to the wireâ with those sources, who have experience of the preparation process from recent tournaments, saying the oil and gas-rich nation have âleft it lateâ.
The eight stadiums and newly-installed metro system are all operational.
But they claim that workers are grafting deep into the early hours each night in order to get the official Fifa fan area at the Al Bidda Park, which opens on November 19 and is designed to host 40,000 people, up and ready for action.
They claim that âscores of migrant workers in their blue boiler-suit uniforms were still building the main entrancesâ on Tuesday.
The main stage is built, but the majority of the remaining site has not yet been completed, with âmigrant labourers working as late as 10pm Doha time on Tuesday night with some, on their breaks, napping in the freshly-laid grass vergesâ.
A number of newly-installed street signs around the city are also still in their âbubble-wrap protectionâ as well as the World Cup-branded steel traffic dividers that sit on the Corniche seafront road.
However, despite the sites resembling ghost towns at the moment except for the workers, organisers are adamant that âQatar is readyâ to welcome hundreds of thousands of fans from next week.
A spokesman for the Supreme Organising Committee said: âAll eight stadia were completed a full year ahead of the tournament start date, a degree of readiness no Fifa World Cup managed before us.
âOther major infrastructure projects â including the new state-of-the-art Doha Metro, new expressways, and upgrades to Hamad International airport â are also complete and in full operation.
âOur attention now is squarely focused on hosting a tournament to remember for the many thousands of fans who will be travelling to Qatar.â