Saudi efforts to professionalize soccer marred by politics
Source: Arab News
By James M. Dorsey
Efforts to professionalize soccer in the Saudi Arabia in
advance of the 2022 World Cup in Qatar are marred by efforts to maintain
political control of the game, a lack of transparency and accountability, and
disputes between Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
Prominent Saudi businessmen and soccer officials grumbled over
the awarding earlier this month by the Saudi Arabian Football Federation (SAFF)
of soccer broadcast rights to Middle East Broadcasting Center Group (MBC) for a
period of 10 years in a deal worth 3.6 billion Saudi riyals or $960 million.
The deal with MBC, which is chaired by Sheikh Waleed Bin Ibrahim Al Brahim, an
in-law of Saudi Arabia’s ruling Al Saud family, was rushed through in an effort
to pre-empt a possible bid by beIN
Sports, the sports channel of the Qatari state-owned Al Jazeera network. MBC’s flagship,
Al Arabiya, was founded as a counterweight to Al Jazeera.
Saudi Arabia alongside the United Arab Emirates and Bahrain
withdrew its ambassador from Doha earlier this year in protest against Qatari
support of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamist group whose government was last
year overthrown by a military coup in Egypt and which has since been banned as
a terrorist organization in Saudi Arabia and Egypt. Egypt this week banned the
group’s political arm, the Freedom and Justice Party.
Ahmed Eid Al Harbi, the federation’s first freely elected president
who is widely seen as a reformer, suggested in a news conference that the
non-transparent awarding had been decided in consultation with the senior government
officials because there had been national issues involved that were “larger
than soccer.” Al Harbi did not elaborate on what those issues were.
But Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, a prominent member of the
Saudi ruling family and one of the world’s wealthiest men, suggested on Twitter
that the awarding to MBC had violated King Abdullah’s orders without specifying
what they were. Prince Alwaleed said that he had put forward a bid that was 400
million riyals ($100 million) higher than that of MBC. MBC expects to annually broadcast some 240
matches on four free-to-air channels launched earlier this month.
The awarding came shortly after King Abdullah tasked the
Saudi national oil company Aramco with the construction in the next two years
of 11 stadia, each with a capacity of 45,000 spectators. The decision coupled
with a plan to privatize soccer clubs that are owned by the government or
members of the ruling family appeared to have resolved a debate about whether
the kingdom’s first national sports plan should emphasize spectator or
performance sports.
The debate was sparked by concerns that soccer pitches like
in other Middle Eastern and North African countries could emerge as venues for
the expression of pent-up anger and frustration. In the realization that Saudis
are soccer crazy, the government has quietly sought advice on how to deal with
fans following a number of incidents on Saudi pitches and fans forcing Mr. Al
Harbi’s predecessor Prince Nawaf bin Faisal to step down, the first time
popular pressure obliged a member of a Gulf ruling family to resign.
The plan to build 11 new stadia made no mention of possibly
including facilities for women spectators in a country that enforces strict
gender segregation. The issue of soccer pitches as a venue for the venting of
pent-up anger and frustration arose again during the recent World Cup in Brazil
against a backdrop of an on-off again debate in the kingdom about women’s
sports and access to stadia. A Saudi psychiatrist, Imad al-Dowsari, warned in a
study that women’s passion for soccer served to release pent-up energy and endangered
their role in society.
Saudi Arabia has no official facilities for female athletes
or physical education programs for girls in public schools. Spanish consultants
hired to draft Saudi Arabia’s first ever national sports plan were instructed
by the government to do so for men only.
Saudi Arabia alongside Yemen was moreover the only Middle
Eastern nation that refused to sign on to a campaign by the region’s soccer
associations grouped in the West Asian Football Federation (WAFF) to put
women’s soccer on par with men’s football.
Human Rights Watch has accused Saudi Arabia of kowtowing to
assertions by the country's powerful conservative Muslim clerics that female
sports constitute "steps of the devil" as well as a corrupting and
satanic influence that would spread
decadence. The clerics warned that running and jumping could damage a woman's
hymen and ruin her chances of getting married.
Concern that the World Cup could lead to violations of Saudi
Arabia’s strict gender rules prompted authorities in the province of Mecca,
home to Islam’s holiest city, to remove public television screens during the
tournament to prevent men and women from mixing.
The move sparked protests on social media. “Those who
removed the screens showing the World Cup in the gardens didn't do it because
of mixing but because they love to kill peoples’ pleasure,” thundered an angry
soccer fan on Twitter. “If a person is sitting with his family, and he is in
charge, what kind of mixing are they talking about?” asked another.
For his part Al Harbi last year suggested that the creation
of facilities for women would increase capacity at stadiums by 15 percent He
initially announced that two stadia in Jeddah and Riyadh would be refurbished
so that they could accommodate women but then was forced to backtrack saying
that it would have to be based on “a sovereign decision. Neither I nor SAFF can
make it. Only the political leadership in this country can make that decision.”
James M.
Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies
as Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, co-director of the Institute
of Fan Culture of the University of Würzburg and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, and a forthcoming book with the
same title.
Comments
Post a Comment