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Security guard dies after fall at World Cup stadium in Qatar

A security guard died after suffering a fall at a World Cup stadium in Qatar, tournament organizers said on Wednesday.

Organizers say they 'are investigating the circumstances leading to the fall as a matter of urgency'

The outside of a stadium is shown at nighttime.
The exterior of Lusail Stadium is pictured before the semifinal match between Croatia and Argentina at the World Cup in Lusail, Qatar, on Tuesday. A security guard has died after a fall at the stadium, tournament organizers say. (Yukihito Taguchi/USA TODAY Sports)

A security guard died after suffering a fall at a World Cup stadium in Qatar, tournament organizers said on Wednesday.

The Supreme Committee said that John Njau Kibue fell at Lusail Stadium on Saturday. He was taken to the hospital and put in intensive care but died on Tuesday, the organizers said in a statement. The security staff at stadiums is largely made up of migrant workers, particularly from Kenya and other African nations. The Supreme Committee did not specify Kibue's nationality.

His family was informed and the organizers "are investigating the circumstances leading to the fall as a matter of urgency," the committee said.

There was no match at Lusail Stadium on Saturday. The venue will host the final on Sunday between Argentina and the winner of the France-Morocco semifinal.

Since being named as host of this year's World Cup, Qatar has come under intense scrutiny over conditions for over two million migrants who work in the country in everything from construction jobs to service industries. Rights groups say workers face unsafe conditions at work, including extreme heat that has caused deaths, as well as exploitation by employers, despite reforms instituted by Qatar.

Qatari officials say stronger regulations over work conditions have been imposed under the reforms. They say three workers died in workplace accidents connected to the construction of new stadiums for the World Cup over the past decade, along with 37 other stadium workers who died outside the workplace during that time. They argue that accident rates at the stadiums are comparable to others around the world.

However, Britain's Guardian newspaper reported last year that at least 6,500 migrant workers — many of them working on World Cup projects — had died in Qatar since 2010, based on its calculations from official records.

With files from Reuters