The 2022 World Cup: Is Qatar Putting its Best Foot Forward?
By James M.
Dorsey
This is
Qatar's year to put its best foot forward.
A major
producer of natural gas, the tiny Gulf state is under the magnifying glass as
it enters the final phase of hosting the 2022 World Cup later this year and
emerges as a potential part of efforts to reduce European dependence on Russian
energy.
On balance,
Qatar looks like it has already succeeded, as much on its own steam as with the
help of its erstwhile detractors in the Gulf and elsewhere in the Arab world,
including the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia.
Over the
past decade, much of the attention has focused on labour rights in the Gulf
state as a result of world governing soccer body FIFA’s awarding of the 2022
World Cup hosting rights to Qatar in 2010.
Qatar
remains a target of criticism by human rights groups, despite
implementing far-reaching reforms of its kafala or labour sponsorship system
that long put workers at the mercy of their employers.
The
criticism is rooted in the Gulf state’s weak implementation of the reforms; a
problematic judicial system; a top-down, centralised decision-making process;
and poor handling of World Cup and sports-related incidents.
In the
latest incident, The Guardian newspaper, a pillar of critical coverage of the
Qatari World Cup, reported that migrant workers, a majority of the
population, had collectively paid billions of dollars in illegal recruitment
fees over the last
decade. Qatar outlawed burdening migrant workers with recruitment fees as part
of its reforms.
Qatar opened
recruitment centres in eight labour-supplying countries to ensure that
recruitment would meet ethical standards in line with recommendations made by a
Qatar Foundation study. The centres have reduced the risk of employment terms
in workers’ contracts being unilaterally changed but have been unable to curb
the levelling of recruitment fees.
To
compensate for their inability, the Supreme Committee for Delivery &
Legacy, the Qatari organizer of the World Cup, has obliged companies it
contracts to repay the fees without workers having to provide proof of payment.
Companies have so far pledged to repay roughly USD$28.5 million to some 49,000
workers, $22 million of which have already been paid out.
It is a step
the government could apply nationally with relative ease in an effort to
demonstrate sincerity and, more fundamentally, counter the criticism.
Similarly, in response to complaints raised by human rights groups and others,
the government could also offer to compensate families of workers who die on
construction sites. None of these measures would put a dent in Qatari budgets
but would earn the Gulf state immeasurable goodwill.
“The migrant
workers injured or families of those who died in the build-up to the World Cup
should be cared for,” said Lise Klaveness, the newly-elected president of the
Norwegian Football Federation, at this week’s FIFA Congress in Doha.
Ms.
Klaveness’ stirring speech drew a fiery response from Supreme Committee
secretary-general Hassan Al-Thawadi. “We’re not seeking validation. Legacy is
being delivered as we speak. We’ve showcased to the world what tournament
hosting can do,” Mr. Al-Thawadi said.
Nevertheless,
Qatar hasn’t done itself any favours with its handling of the case of Abdullah
Ibhais, a
Jordanian-Palestinian Supreme Committee communications executive, who opposed
putting a spin on a strike by migrant workers, including some assigned to World
Cup-related projects. The workers were on strike because their salaries had not
been paid.
Mr. Ibhais
was subsequently accused of leaking state secrets and awarding a social media
tender to a Turkish bidder in return for Turkish citizenship. He asserts that
he was forced to sign a confession and was initially refused access to a
lawyer.
Mr. Ibhais
was sentenced to five years in prison based on evidence that, according to
Human Rights Watch, was “vague, circumstantial, and in some cases contradictory.”
However, an appeals court subsequently reduced his sentence to three years
in jail.
In a
statement, the Supreme Committee insisted that the allegations against Mr.
Ibhais had “merit. The committee contended that the assertion that the charges constitute
retribution for “raising matters pertaining to workers’ welfare is absolutely
false.”
In contrast
to recurring rights issues that cast a shadow over the Qatari World Cup, Qatar garnered
substantial goodwill during the 3.5-year-long United Arab Emirates-Saudi-led
diplomatic and economic boycott designed to force the Gulf state to subjugate
itself to the will of its detractors.
Perceived as
the underdog confronted with demands that would have de facto deprived it of
its independence, Qatar was lauded for its resilience and steadfastness that
ultimately persuaded the UAE and Saudi Arabia to end the boycott in January
2021.
Since then,
Qatar was awarded for its key role in assisting the United States in its
bungled withdrawal from Afghanistan with the US nominating it as a ‘Major Non-NATO
Ally.’
Qatar is the
only Gulf state to enjoy that status. It ranks Qatar among the United States’
closest allies alongside Australia and Japan and opens the door to more joint
military exercises and potential arms sales.
The
nomination takes on added significance at a time that Gulf states worry about
United States efforts to rejigger and reduce its security commitments in the
region and strike a deal with Iran on reviving the 2015 nuclear agreement that
curbed the Islamic republic’s nuclear program.
The deal
would lift many US sanctions against Iran and return it to the international
fold without addressing Iran’s ballistic missiles program and support for
militias in Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen – issues that are major concerns for Saudi
Arabia, the UAE, and Israel.
Meanwhile, Qatar
has earned brownie points in the Ukraine crisis despite keeping its lines open
to Moscow and refraining from adopting US and European sanctions against
Russia.
In contrast
to Saudi Arabia and the UAE, which refused US requests to increase oil
production to stop prices from spiralling out of control, Qatar has started
talks with Germany, France, Belgium, and Italy about long-term liquified
natural gas supplies that would help Europe reduce its dependence on Russian
energy.
"For the US, it is now all about Qatar and being friends with Qatar. What
about your allies that have been by your side for years?" complained a
Saudi official, clearly upset that Qatar was succeeding where the kingdom had
failed.
"The Qataris are in a unique spot as a
trusted player to a
spectrum of actors that is almost unparalleled, from the White House to the
Taliban to Iran to European gas consumers," said Middle East scholar Adel
Hamaizia.
All in all, Qatar
has, in many ways, already put its best foot forward.
Nevertheless,
human rights groups will view the final stretch to the World Cup scheduled for
the end of the year as an opportunity to increase pressure on the Gulf state to
address their remaining concerns.
The final
stretch is not only an opportunity for activists. It also is an opportunity for
Qatar to put its best foot forward on labour issues that it already
acknowledges and has made significant strides in addressing.
To watch a video version of this story please
click here.
A podcast version is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr,
Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon,
and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar, a Senior Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute and Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and
the author of the syndicated column and blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East
Soccer.
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