『The FIFA Files』のカバーアート

The FIFA Files

The FIFA Files

著者: Open Source Network
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Every World Cup ends with a trophy. This one started with an indictment.

The FIFA Files is an investigative podcast from Open Source Network. Across 40 episodes, we use the documents — court filings, leaked emails, regulator reports — to tell the full story of how FIFA was bought, sold, prosecuted, and partly let off the hook over the past fifteen years. From the Baur au Lac arrests to the Garcia Report, from $200,000 envelopes in Trinidad to migrant worker deaths in Doha, every claim we make is sourced and verifiable.

The show is built for football fans who want to know what they're watching, and for anyone interested in how powerful institutions get held accountable — or don't. We're independent, AI-assisted, document-driven, and committed to transparency about all three.

Part 1, "The Takedown" (5 episodes), launches May 22, 2026. New episodes daily through the 2026 World Cup.

Full transcripts and source links: thefifafiles.com

© 2026 Open Source Network
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  • 12. The Reckoning That Never Came
    2026/06/02

    By the end of 2017 — when the full Garcia Report was released, when the Sunday Times had been publishing for three years, when seven FIFA officials had been led out of a Zurich hotel under bedsheets — the case for institutional action was as clear as it was ever going to be. Nothing happened. Russia 2018 went ahead. Qatar 2022 went ahead. No World Cup was moved, no host was stripped, no senior FIFA official was sanctioned for the conduct of the bidding.

    In this episode:

    - The three procedural mechanisms that could have re-opened the votes — and why each one wasn't invoked

    - Sepp Blatter's repeated public admission that the 2010 vote was "a mistake" — what an admission means without action

    - Domenico Scala, FIFA's senior compliance figure, and his May 2016 resignation in protest

    - The 2017 reform that came instead — and why the December 2024 Saudi Arabia 2034 award is the operative test of what it actually changed

    Key documents cited:

    - Garcia Report (full text, 27 June 2017)

    - Domenico Scala resignation letter, 13 May 2016

    - FIFA Congress voting records: 2026 award (June 2018), 2030 award (October 2024), Saudi Arabia 2034 award (11 December 2024)

    Full transcript and source links: thefifafiles.com/episodes/12-the-reckoning-that-never-came

    Subscribe to the OSN newsletter for source PDFs and behind-the-scenes: thefifafiles.com/newsletter

    The FIFA Files is an Open Source Network production. Every document tells a story.

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    45 分
  • 10. The Builders
    2026/05/29

    To deliver what the bid book promised — twelve stadiums, a metro, an airport expansion, a new port, hundreds of thousands of hotel rooms — Qatar imported a workforce. By 2017, more than two million migrants were in the country, outnumbering Qatari nationals seven to one. Most came from India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Kenya and the Philippines, recruited under fees of $1,000 to $4,000 paid to agents in their home countries.

    In this episode:

    - The kafala system, recruitment debt, confiscated passports — the structural conditions that locked workers into employment they could not leave

    - The Guardian's Pete Pattisson investigation, 2013–2022, including the 6,500 figure — what that number actually means

    - The Cardiff University 2019 study finding that ~200 Nepalese deaths recorded as "natural causes" were likely heat-related

    - The 2017–2020 ILO reform programme: the dismantling of kafala, the wage protection system, the Gulf's first non-discriminatory minimum wage — and where implementation has fallen short

    Key documents cited:

    - Guardian, "Revealed: 6,500 migrant workers have died in Qatar since World Cup awarded" (Pete Pattisson, 23 February 2021)

    - Amnesty International, "All Work, No Pay" (September 2016) and follow-ups through 2022

    - ILO Qatar country reports (2016–2022); Cardiff University study, Cardiology (2019)

    Full transcript and source links: thefifafiles.com/episodes/10-the-builders

    Subscribe to the OSN newsletter for source PDFs and behind-the-scenes: thefifafiles.com/newsletter

    The FIFA Files is an Open Source Network production. Every document tells a story.

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    25 分
  • 9. Desert Gold
    2026/05/28

    Episode 7 was the cash. This is everything that wasn't cash. The Aspire Academy in Doha, founded in 2004 with a $2.4 billion endowment. Football Dreams scouting programmes in seventeen countries — many of them, by 2010, with FIFA Executive Committee voters. A Brazil-Argentina friendly in Doha fifteen days before the ballot. A private aircraft. The Garcia Report called it "a troubling pattern."

    In this episode:

    - How Aspire's Football Dreams country list closely tracked the geography of the FIFA voters Qatar needed

    - The 17 November 2010 Doha friendly: $1.5 million paid to the Argentine FA to bring Brazil and Argentina to the Khalifa Stadium

    - The private flights to Brazil days before the vote — three FIFA voters, on a Qatari Football Association aircraft, on no official FIFA business

    - Where the line sits between lobbying, sponsorship, and corruption — and why FIFA's Ethics Committee chose not to draw it

    Key documents cited:

    - Garcia Report (full text, released 27 June 2017)

    - Aspire Zone Foundation public records

    - Eckert Summary of the Garcia findings, 13 November 2014

    Full transcript and source links: thefifafiles.com/episodes/9-desert-gold

    Subscribe to the OSN newsletter for source PDFs and behind-the-scenes: thefifafiles.com/newsletter

    The FIFA Files is an Open Source Network production. Every document tells a story.

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    12 分
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