Qatar has come under fire again over the treatment of World Cup workers, alleging systematic abuses including forced labour.
Amnesty International's published a report claims that dozens of people from Nepal and India have been housed in squalid accommodation.
It also says that workers have been barred from leaving the country by employers who have confiscated their passports.
All of this comes two years after the organisers of the 2022 tournament apparently drafted welfare standards in the wake of criticism.
Amnesty is calling on FIFA to act.
"FIFA can do a lot and FIFA has a responsibility. This is its major business - awarding the World Cup," said Audrey Gaughran, Director of Global Issues and Research at Amnesty International.
"As part of its major business, it has awarded the World Cup to a country where migrant workers are subjected to systemic abuse of their labour rights. As such, it has to act given that those workers are going to be at risk of abuse on World Cup contracts."
JUST RELEASED: Amnesty's report on abuse of World Cup workers in #Qatar https://t.co/UIXf2n98Yd- Amnesty USA Media (@AIUSAmedia) 30 mars 2016
Amnesty said it interviewed 132 workers involved in the rebuilding of the Khalifa stadium, a vast sporting complex in Doha that is part of the multi-billion euro construction boom in the gas-rich Gulf state and will host a World Cup quarter-final.
Swiss-based FIFA said in a statement that it would urge government authorities in Qatar to take action and ensure newly-drafted labour standards became a benchmark for construction projects in Qatar.
The head of Qatar's 2022 committee says Amnesty has highlighted "malpractices" faced by some workers. Hassan Al Thawadi added that Doha was "resolving gaps day by day" and described the World Cup as a "catalyst for change."
Amnesty accuses Qatar of abusing World Cup workers https://t.co/vmLc0sbX8b pic.twitter.com/cxG28laC7V- AFP news agency (@AFP) 30 mars 2016
Yep, another :19 seconds you will never get back!
Hundreds of human rights activists, students and migrants have taken to the streets of Athens chanting "open the borders."
The migrants were some of the thousands left stranded in Greece because of frontier closures across the Balkans.
The show of anger on Wednesday cam just days before Turkey is due to start taking back illegal migrants from Greece under an EU deal - a deal the demonstrators demanded be scrapped.
"We want nothing from the Greek government. They themselves are in trouble, the Greek economy right now," said one migrant from Afghanistan.
"We're asking the world, the big countries, to open the borders for us. We're not here for money. We're here for a safe place. We want a peaceful land on the planet."
#Greece #refugees protest in #Athens against EU-Turkey #migration agreement AP_Images/ PGiannakouris pic.twitter.com/OrvZBFTCtu- Petros Giannakouris (@PGiannakouris) March 30, 2016
Migrant and refugee arrivals from Turkey are on the rise again in Greece.
Authorities recorded 766 between Tuesday and Wednesday morning - around four times the number seen in the previous 24 hours.
Under the EU-Turkey deal, migrants and refugees who arrive in Greece from Turkey will be subject to being sent back once they have been registered and their individual asylum claim processed.
Returns are due to begin from 4 April, and for each Syrian returned from the Greek islands to Turkey, one will be sent the other way for direct resettlement in Europe.
Human rights groups and some governments have expressed concerns about the legality of the scheme.
Reporting from the demonstration, euronews' Konstantinos Tsellos said: "The closed borders policy has caused despair for the thousands of migrants and refugees currently stranded here in Greece.
"They're calling for the EU-Turkey deal to not be implemented so that they have a chance to continue their journey to Europe."
US Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump is no stranger to controversy - and now he has sparked off a spat over abortion.
The billionaire businessman has said that women who end pregnancies should be punished if America bans the procedure.
It has triggered a torrent of criticism from both sides of the debate, including on social media. His White House rivals are among those who have been reacting.
We can't let someone with this much contempt for women's rights anywhere near the White House.https://t.co/OjU9gRwsxo- Hillary Clinton (@HillaryClinton) 30 mars 2016
Even by his impossibly low standards, realDonaldTrump's suggestion that women be punished for seeking abortion is abhorrent.- Hillary Clinton (HillaryClinton) 30 mars 2016
Since the comments were broadcast, Trump has rowed back his remarks. First by saying that the abortion issue should be handled by states and then later by saying that doctors who perform them should be held responsible.
"The doctor or any other person performing this illegal act upon a woman would be held legally responsible, not the woman," Trump said in his last statement.
"The woman is a victim in this case as is the life in her womb."
Abortion was legalised in the US in 1973, when the Supreme Court declared that a woman's constitutional right to privacy protects her decision to end a pregnancy.
In the decades since then, there have not been enough votes on the Supreme Court to reverse the ruling, but numerous states have passed laws aimed at restricting abortion.
Trump - a man liked and loathed - has won support from Republican voters for selling himself as a Washington outsider. But he has also been a magnet for criticism over his controversial comments about women and minority groups.
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