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26th June 2023
05:40pm BST

"The guidelines were brought in after I signed my contract," said Lineker. "The goal-posts were shifted, halfway through, and only became applicable to everyone. I try my best. I never tell anyone who I vote for. I'm never going to tell anyone what to do."Lineker does feel the BBC 'needs to be more proud of itself and shot out a little more about how good it is'. The institution has its' faults and is occasionally a strange place to work, he says, but it does a lot of "incredible" shows and work. "We get our salaries published now," he added. "And I'm one of those people that has been dead open about my salary. I don't do any tricky means to pay any less tax, or anything like that. I don't have it going [to me] via a production company, or anything like that. And I'm at the top of it - I'm pretty sure there's one or two that might earn more! - but I get battered for it, every July. It's nowJune so it's coming up again." During the interview, Lineker was asked about the BBC's coverage of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, last winter, and how the broadcaster dedicated a large amount of their tournament opener coverage dealing with the country's human rights issues and exploitation of migrant workers. As he discussed the BBC's World Cup coverage, Lineker did admit there was something it dropped the ball on. [caption id="attachment_274330" align="aligncenter" width="647"]
Gary Lineker took over as Match of the Day host in 1999. (Credit: Getty)[/caption]
"There was a reason that made this one different," Lineker told Unfiltered. "It was not necessarily human rights, because every World Cup we do has different issues, in some ways. "We went to Moscow [in 2018], a few years after they had already invaded [Ukrainian territory]. We were in Rio [in 2014] and there were massive demonstrations everywhere about how we shouldn't be spending fortunes on building stadiums when they have so many social problems. The safety in South Africa [in 2010] was a a big thing that was talked about. There has always been something. "But I think what made this one different was the way Qatar got the World Cup. It was corrupt, and we know that. The evidence was all there. I was in the room when they got it... it was, 'Qatar in the summer? It's 40, 50 degrees. You can't play football in that'. I remember, I felt like I needed a shower after I got out. It was that bad."Lineker added that the mounting deaths of migrant workers, helping to build the stadiums and World Cup facilities and infrastructure, were facts that could not be ignored. "We wanted to tell people the facts," he said, before adding that the production team drew on some 'heavyweights from the BBC news team to make sure it was right'. He continued:
"We should have done it in Russia, to be honest [and] in hindsight, after what they've done. "And now, if it had been after [the invasion of] Ukraine... well, they did it in 2014 first. We probably should have done it then. It is the one criticism that I would gladly accept."Asked how much of an input he had with that opening statement, in Qatar, Lineker replied, "Well, I do the words. So, obviously, a very strong part."
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