The 2022 World Cup: Qatar's Make-or-Break Moment
By James M. Dorsey
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The final run-up to the 2022 World Cup and the tournament's management is make-it-or-break-it time for Qatar.
Both will determine Qatar’s
ultimate soft power benefit from the World Cup. How Qatar manages the tournament,
and potential flare and hick-ups will shape how the 2022 World Cup is perceived
and remembered.
The jury is still out in
contrast to Qatar’s success in meeting geopolitical challenges it faced in the
12 years since world soccer body FIFA awarded the Gulf state its hosting rights
in late 2010.
Reproducing its geopolitical
success, achieved as much on its own steam as with the unintended help of its
erstwhile detractors, the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, may prove
easier said than done.
Ultimately, the primary
litmus test will be how Qatar handles issues such as activists seeking to
capitalize on the opportunity to make a point, potential fan rowdiness, and
culturally sensitive issues such as intoxication, public expressions of
affection, and sexual diversity.
Asked
in an interview barely a month before kickoff whether gay couples would be
allowed to hold hands in public, Nasser al-Khater, the CEO of the Supreme
Committee for Delivery & Legacy, the tournament’s organizer, replied
unambiguously, “yes,” the first such acknowledgement in 12 years of
controversy.
Mr. Al-Khater went on to tell Sky News reporter Rob
Harris, ‘if I held your hand, Rob, and walked outside on the street for hours and
hours and hours, nobody would say anything to us.”
Moreover, Qatar has suggested
that World Cup fans committing minor offences such as public drunkenness or
going shirtless in stadiums would escape prosecution under plans being
developed by authorities.
Following the example of
several British cities, Qatar reportedly also intends to set up ‘sobering
tents,' a facility where intoxicated
fans can sober up before being sent on their way with a warning but no fine or
punishment.
Nevertheless, Qatar is
sparing no effort to prepare for potential on the ground as well online
disruptions. Qatar has invited security forces from Turkey, Pakistan, Morocco,
and Britain as well as advisors from the FBI and France to bolster its
capabilities. It has also invested
heavily in cybersecurity.
To enhance fans' experience
and attempt to turn around the battle for hearts and minds that Qatar appears
to be losing in the United States, Europe, and Latin America, but only in parts
of Africa and Asia, the Gulf state is hoping to turn the World Cup into an
extravaganza.
Qatar has rented, for
example, the Glastonbury Festival’s giant animatronic spider to form the centrepiece
of its Arcadia Spectacular fan festival, a month-long dance music show. The 15 metre high
structure belches plumes of fire from its mechanical arachnid thorax.
That hasn’t stopped the US embassy in Doha from
producing a video warning fans that public
drunkenness in Qatar is punishable with up to six months in prison, while
public displays of affection or wearing revealing clothes can be grounds for arrest.
"Arguing with or
insulting others in public could lead to arrest. Activities like protests,
religious proselytising, advocacy of atheism, and criticism of the government
of Qatar or the religion of Islam may be criminally prosecuted here. That applies
to your social media posts, too," the video warned.
Detained in Dubai, a
London-based law firm representing expatriates with legal difficulties in the
United Arab Emirates and elsewhere in the Gulf, launched an
emergency help app in the belief that there
will be “an increase in the number of arrests throughout the Gulf region.”
The law firm’s founder, Radha
Stirling, asserted that “with this sporting event come the confusing and
arbitrarily enforced laws that have seen thousands of visitors end up behind
bars.”
The suggestion of leniency
reflected Qatar's effort to balance between the mores of a conservative Muslim
culture and the need to accommodate the sometimes-raucous exuberance of soccer
fans.
"Increased leniency
pleases the international community but comes with the risk that it might upset
conservatives inside the country," said a Western diplomat.
Most recently, remarks by
former Qatari race car driver Hamad Al-Suwaidi that Israeli fans would be
welcome as “brothers” in Qatar that is “also their
country” sparked outrage on social media and questions about what kind of
reception Israelis could expect.
In an interview with Kan,
Israel’s public broadcaster, Mr. Al-Suwaidi advocated normalization of
relations between Qatar and Israel.
Mr. Al-Suwaidi made his
remarks shortly after becoming a media sensation in Qatar because he had
installed a gigantic stone replica of the World Cup soccer trophy outside his
home in Doha.
“Recently, there have been
some lone voices calling for normalisation with the Zionist entity, and
welcoming settlers to visit Doha! Since when was Qatar their country? Since
when were they our brothers and friends? We neither
welcome nor will be friends with those who kill the people and children of
Palestine,” tweeted Ahmed Al Binali, a
Qatari national.
Impact on reputational
capital
In the final analysis, how
Qatar manages labour, social, ethical, and political issues that have cast a
shadow over Qatar’s World Cup, despite Qatari efforts to work with its critics
and significant changes introduced over the past decade, will determine the
soft power cost/benefit analysis of the tournament’s impact on the Gulf state’s
reputational capital.
If mega sporting events often
leave a legacy of white elephants and debt, the Qatar World Cup already
suggests that it will have a different legacy.
That is true even though
Qatar's bid for the World Cup was simultaneously successful and a case of being
in the wrong place at the wrong time. The Gulf state won its hosting rights
when FIFA witnessed its worst corruption scandal.
Qatar never erased suspicion
of wrongdoing despite its consistent denials, the lack of evidence, and a
two-year-long FIFA ethics committee investigation that found no significant
reason for concern.
Several suspicious dealings;
internal FIFA politics involving Mohammed bin Hammam, a former head of the
Asian Football Confederation (AFC) and member of the world soccer body’s
executive committee who was banned from football for life; the rivalry between
Gulf states; and sour grapes on the part of Qatar's competitors, who had
allocated a pittance to their bids compared to what the Gulf state invested,
fuelled suspicion of Qatari bribery in its bid to win World Cup hosting rights.
At the same time, Qatar has
been dogged by its links to Islamists as well as jihadists. Most recently, a US
court case and a federal
investigation put Qatar's alleged ties back in the spotlight.
The family of Steven Sotloff,
an American Israeli journalist beheaded in 2014 in Syria by the Islamic State,
asserted in its petition to the court that prominent Qatari institutions had
wired US$800,000 to an Islamic State judge who ordered the murder of Mr.
Sotloff and another American journalist, James Foley.
Separately, US federal
prosecutors have been investigating potential ties between militants and Sheikh
Khalid bin Hamad Al Thani, a half-brother of Qatar's emir. The investigation
focused on whether Mr. Al Thani provided money and supplies to Jabhat al-Nusra
or the Nusra Front, al-Qaeda's erstwhile branch in Syria.
Similar allegations have been
made in two ongoing lawsuits filed in London on behalf of Syrian refugees.
Qatar has consistently denied
supporting political violence but like other Gulf states, including the UAE and
Saudi Arabia, aided militants in Syria fighting the regime of President Bashar
al-Asad. "Look, in Syria, everybody did mistakes, including your country," said Hamad bin Jasim Al
Thani, Qatar's former prime minister and foreign minister, in a 2017 interview
with American journalist Charlie Rose.
Mr. Al Thani insisted that
Qatar had never intentionally funded extremists in Syria and had cut off
funding to any group it learned had another "agenda."
Accelerating social change
Irrespective of whether one
believes that reforms have gone far enough, the Qatari World Cup has
accelerated, if not sparked, social change, particularly regarding the rights
and labour conditions of migrant workers, a primary focus over the past decade.
Hosting the World Cup has
also, at times, sparked brief debates on taboo subjects like citizenship and
LGBT rights.
Moreover, in
engaging with its critics and countering criticism, Qatar faced unique odds. These
included a debate over genuine issues was blurred by a layer of prejudice,
bias, misconceptions, sour grapes, and geopolitical infighting involving
massive disinformation campaigns by its geopolitical distractors.
Bias and prejudice were
evident in arguments early on that Qatar was too small and too hot to host a
mega event and had no soccer legacy even though it had won in
several international tournaments,
including the Gulf Cup, the Asian Games, a West Asian Football Federation
tournament, and the Asian Cup.
Critics have not answered the
question of who decides and what criteria would determine whether a country
should be disbarred, including a definition of minimal size and legacy.
Similarly, the discussion
evaded that the argument of ‘too hot’ camouflaged European soccer’s reluctance
to adjust its schedules to a tournament in the winter rather than the
traditional summer months even though it had 12 years to prepare.
Some critics asserted that
the Qatari investment in the World Cup was a waste of money because Qatar
post-tournament would be unable to fill the custom-built stadiums.
Although these critics
ignored Qatar’s right to do with its money what it wants, they did acknowledge
the distinction between what was best for enhancing the Gulf state’s reputation
and soft power, and what economically made the most sense.
Media reports asserted that
Qatar was turning a sport that traced its roots to the working class and has
since become a middle-class passion into a playground for the wealthy and
super-rich.
With hotel rooms in Doha
costing up to US$4,000 a night during the World Cup, cheaper options included a
steel bed in a shared room in the desert at US$84 a night, or accommodation on
two docked cruise ships from US$179 to $800. Barely a month before kickoff,
Qatar hired a third
ship from Geneva-based MSC Cruises, the
1,075-cabin MSC Opera. on which cabins started at $470.
Prices on the cruise ships
were likely to drop when half the teams go home after the quarterfinals.
"It's clear that there's a
focus on a type of premium tourism,
but the vast majority that go to a World Cup are middle-class," said Ronan
Evain, executive director of Football Supporters Europe.
For Qatar, the choice was
between catering to a demography that was important in shaping its reputation
and the kind of investment in hospitality that made the most economic sense.
In the final analysis, Qatar
appears to have decided that most World Cup fans would not be frequenting its
hotels once the World Cup final was played.
That translated into an
emphasis on accommodation geared toward premium travelers with those on more
restricted budgets constituting an afterthought.
Planners could not have
anticipated the Ukraine war, but Qatar’s misfortune was that the World Cup was
about to take place at a moment that middle and working-class households across
the globe were struggling with significantly higher energy and food prices and
spiralling inflation as a result of the conflict.
It’s not slavery
Meanwhile, scholar Omar
Al-Ubaydli questioned whether the onerous labour recruitment system in
labour-supplying countries and labour-importing countries in the Gulf amounted
to slavery.
“Migrant workers in the GCC
—unlike Ottoman Janissaries— do not
satisfy any definition of slavery
since, for the most part, they come of their own volition and are free to quit
their jobs at any time,” Mr. Al-Ubaydli said. He was referring to the Gulf
Cooperation Council that groups Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain, Kuwait,
and Oman.
Add to this that the debate
about Qatar is as much a discussion about human rights as it is about the
oversized international influence of wealthy resource-rich Gulf states.
In a seething
commentary that reflected much of the
Western-centric bias and prejudice, Guardian sportswriter Jonathan Liew
asserted that “in a way, we’re not really angry at some tiny distant enclave in
the Gulf, but at ourselves. At the way we allowed this malign, cannibalistic
tyranny to embed itself in our institutions, our cities and towns, our politics
and our monarchy, our favourite sport… (The Qatar World Cup’s) very existence
is an indictment of every single person involved in its conception and every single
person who could have stopped it happening.”
Mr. Liew's comment, to some degree, explains the
tone of much of the often-justified criticism that keeps Qatar in the firing
line of criticism by human rights groups and European national soccer teams and
associations.
The criticism is likely to be
a fixture on the pitch of World Cup matches.
Double standards
The Danish national team, for
example, opted to make a statement during its World Cup matches. Its kit,
designed by Danish sportswear company Hummel, chose black as one of the colours
of the team’s jerseys to commemorate workers who lost their lives building
World Cup infrastructure.
“We support the Danish
national team all the way, but that isn't the
same as supporting Qatar as a host nation,” Hummel said in a tweet.
The Danes are not the only
ones amid accusations of hypocrisy.
Critics note that the Danish
football association and its various European counterparts
had no qualms about playing in the 2018 World Cup in Russia, four years after the annexation of Crimea and as
the Kremlin cracked down on gender minorities and militarily supported Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad.
“When the 2018 FIFA World Cup
was held, there was no
concerted performance in support of LGBTQ issues, despite Russia’s clear and obvious stance on the
matter,” said Qatari artist Ghada Al Khater.
Ms. Al Khater further noted
that the Danes and other were being allowed to carry their anti-Qatari protest
on to the World Cup pitch even though FIFA bans political expressions during
matches.
Pointing to restrictive
European policies to curb migration and the frequent deaths of migrants in the
Mediterranean, Ms. Al Khater asked: “What migrant rights do you speak of when
vulnerable men, women and children are either caged in inhumane refugee camps
or sent back to the very lands they fled from?”
Other critics also drew
attention to Denmark’s adoption of a harsh policy against asylum seekers that,
at times, put their lives at risk by returning them to Mr Al-Assad's Syria.
For its part, European soccer
body UEFA has established a working group to support demands for a compensation
fund for World Cup workers who suffered injuries or died. US Soccer, America’s
soccer authority, said it would join
the group.
US Soccer said it also planned to
have rainbow flags at its fan events
and was exploring ways to incorporate it into the team’s presence throughout
the country.
In addition to supporting
the establishment of a compensation fund, the French Football
Federation said it wanted to see the creation of a migrant workers centre in
Qatar that would cater to labourers’ needs.
At the same time, Paris and
other French cities said they would not broadcast World Cup matches on giant
screens in public fan zones out of
concern about the plight of migrant workers and the environmental impact of air
conditioning in Qatari stadia.
Paris took its decision,
although Qatar Sports Investments owns the city’s premier football club, Paris
Saint-Germain (PSG).
Strasbourg mayor Jeanne
Barseghian echoed long-standing, seemingly Eurocentric arguments that Qatar
should have been automatically disqualified because of its climate to justify
her decision not to broadcast matches.
"While climate change is
a palpable reality, with fires and droughts and other disasters, organizing a
soccer tournament in the desert defies common sense and amounts to an
ecological disaster," Ms. Barseghian said.
Moreover, the captains of
eight European teams, including England’s Harry Kane, said they would wear rainbow
"One Love" armbands during matches that symbolise opposition to discrimination in a
country where homosexuality is banned.
In response, Mr. Al-Khater,
the CEO of the Qatar World Cup organiser, advised the English and Welsh
football associations to focus on
their teams and leave to experts the discussion about conditions for migrant
workers and Qatari law.
Mr. Al-Khater said “it’s a
FIFA matter” to decide whether Mr. Kane and his Welsh counterpart, Gareth Bale,
would be allowed to wear the One Love band during matches.
Adding fuel to the fire
Adding fuel to the fire, Al
Sulaiteen Agricultural and Industrial Complex (SAIC) employees, a Qatari
company, told The Guardian in September that the reforms had
not been implemented, including abolishing the
requirement that workers secure their employer’s permission to change jobs.
“The company won’t give
[permission to leave]. You can only change if you go home, cancel your visa,
and apply again,” one worker said. Another laughed at the suggestion that he
was free to change jobs, saying: “If we could change jobs, everyone would
leave!”
Moreover, Pete Pattisson, The
Guardian reporter, described the living conditions of SAIC employees on a farm
on the edge of the desert as violating the Supreme Committee’s workers’ welfare standards.
“Some house three or four
workers in single beds, others five or six in bunks, but all those viewed by
the Guardian were windowless, cramped, and dirty. Towels draped between the
upper and lower bunks provide what little privacy there is. Water bottles,
cooking utensils, and personal belongings are crammed under the beds. Clothes
hang on lines strung across the walls. The camp is as squalid as any this
journalist has seen in nine years of reporting from Qatar,” Mr. Pattison said.
In the same vein, a recent
French television and radio documentary showed substandard accommodation for employees of a
private security firm sub-contracted by a hotel where the France team will be
staying, and another company hired by French hotel chain Accor. Bunkbeds were
infested with insects; bathrooms were filthy; and the wall had damp stains.
Cooking facilities were a sink and two gas rings, the documentary reported.
Like the SAIC employees,
workers said they barely had a day off and had not been paid overtime.
Making things worse, conditions
for media accreditation for the World Cup ban international television crews from interviewing
people in their own homes or filming at accommodation sites, like those housing
migrant workers.
Also forbidden is capturing
footage “near or within” government buildings, universities, places of worship
and hospitals is also prohibited, along with recording on “any privately owned
property,” even with the owner’s consent.
Crews will only be allowed to
film public places in three public places in only three locations in Doha,
including the Corniche waterfront promenade, and the upscale West Bay area.
The sweeping restrictions
extend to accredited crews agreeing not to produce reports that may be
“inappropriate or offensive to the Qatari culture, Islamic principles” or “may
arouse ethnic or religious disturbances.”
The conditions include a
warning that news organisations will be “held responsible for criminal and
civil liability for any breach of the above-mentioned provisions when filming”.
Qatar's response to workers
asserting their rights in an environment of lax implementation has done little
to strengthen its argument.
On the contrary, critics
noted that authorities quickly punished workers standing up for adherence to
the law but were far more lenient towards companies that violated the law.
In the month before Mr.
Pattison published his revelations, Qatar
deported dozens of workers for participating in a rare
illegal protest for unpaid and delayed wages owed to them by another Qatar
company that has won multi-million-dollar World Cup-related contracts, Bandary
International Group.
The workers were deported as
Qatar’s government-sponsored Rule of Law and Anti-Corruption Centre (ROLACC)
promoted its annual Sheikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al-Thani International Excellence
Award in advertisements on Al Jazeera.
While Qatar has been willing
to introduce social and economic reform and promote principles of good
governance, it has rejected demands for workers-related political change,
including the endorsement of the right to strike, collective bargaining, and
the legalization of trade unions.
The furthest Qatar has been
willing to go was to allow employees in companies with a labour force of at
least 30 employees to elect
representatives to joint committees
that would discuss workplace issues with management.
The reports abouts workers’
living and working conditions also coincided with media reports asserting that Qatari influence stemming from the
Gulf state’s ownership of PSG and global sport and entertainment network beIN's
European football broadcasting contracts, including for the UEFA Champions League
and various European national leagues, had shielded Nasser al-Khelaifi from
assertions of conflict of interest.
Besides presiding over PSG
and chairing beIN and Qatar Sports Investments, the Qatari government’s sports
investment vehicle, Mr. Al-Khelaifi, a former tennis professional, is a member
of UEFA’s executive and chairman of the influential European Club Association.
The association is an
umbrella group for more than 200 top clubs that is UEFA's joint venture partner
for selling rights to the Champions League and two other club competitions.
Activists’ challenge
All in all, Qatar’s patchy
implementation of its reforms is likely to ensure that human rights groups will
continue to target the Gulf state in the post-World Cup era.
The critics may have a
platform with Qatar winning hosting
rights for the 2023 Asian Cup.
Saudi Arabia may be next in line after it
was shortlisted for the 2027 tournament.
To counter the criticism,
Qatar will have to maintain engagement with its critics.
Even so, the challenge for
human rights groups and trade unions will be to reframe their efforts so as not
to single out Qatar.
To do so, activists would
have to reposition their campaign as targeting the region if not a global
effort that includes, for example, conditions for migrant labour in Southeast
Asia; Britain, particularly in the health and care sectors; and the US military
in various parts of the world.
Nicholas McGeehan, a militant
human and workers’ rights advocate and one of Qatar’s harshest critics,
acknowledged as much in a tweet.
”Journalists/commentators
writing about worker abuses Qatar 2022 can be real allies to the migrant worker
cause by noting that the same
system and same abuses are found in Saudi Arabia (bidding for 2030 WC), the UAE
(own Man City), Bahrain (host F1) and other Gulf states,” Mr.
McGeehan tweeted.
Osman Jawed, an associate of
Mr. McGeehan’s, went further by suggesting that “there should be an attempt…not
to essentialise Qatar and Qataris as some kind of brutal authoritarians (or)
scapegoat a country as brutal and barbaric. That’s not
helpful.”
Similarly, The Guardian,
another of Qatar’s harshest critics, expanded its coverage in September with a report on the
alleged abuse of Kenyan maids in Saudi Arabia.
More fundamentally, Sharon
Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation
(IUTC), the union that helped persuade Qatar to adopt groundbreaking reforms,
announced that the group would begin targeting other Middle Eastern states. The
IUTC claims to represent 200 million workers worldwide.
In a sign of the frequent
toxicity of the debate about Qatar, Ms. Burrow’s statement received a mixed
reception because of her praise for Qatar in contrast to other human rights and
labour groups.
Ms. Burrow was the odd person
out as others opted to exploit the final stretch to the World Cup that kicks
off on November 20 by stepping up the pressure on the Gulf state.
The IUTC was noticeably
absent in joining other groups calling for a compensation fund for affected
World Cup-related workers.
Post-Qatar World Cup, the
union and human and workers' rights groups will likely focus on Saudi Arabia,
Egypt, and the UAE.
In a mind-boggling
development, Saudi Arabia won the right to host the 2029
Asian Winter Games in Neom, a futuristic US$500
billion city being built on the Red Sea. The successful bid was part of the
desert kingdom’s endeavour to become the world’s latest winter sport
destination.
With Greece and Egypt, Saudi
Arabia is also mulling a bid for the
2030 World Cup, while Egypt is considering competing for
the 2036 Olympics.
The bid by two of the world’s
worst human rights violators would likely make Qatar's experience appear like a
cakewalk.
In an early indication of
what might await the kingdom, 69 per cent of Americans surveyed by the Eurasia
Group Foundation opposed US
arms sales to Saudi Arabia, the world's second-largest
importer of arms (behind India) and the largest importer of American weapons.
The UAE has joined Saudi
Arabia and Egypt in the competition to wrest from Qatar the title of sports hub
of the Middle East.
The Emirates hosted two
National Basketball Association (NBA) games and promoted Yas Island as a go-to playing ground.
The island has hosted various martial arts events in recent years.
In addition, Dubai MENA Tour
announced a partnership
with Liv Golf, the Saudi-sponsored
renegade Golf league.
Setting a standard
The criticism of Qatar was
bolstered not only by the Gulf state’s weak implementation of the reforms but
also a problematic judicial system; a top-down, centralised decision-making
process; poor handling of World Cup and sports-related incidents; often being
reactive rather than proactive, and a failure to be creative in addressing
issues spotlighted by activists.
Lagging enforcement of
policies and legal changes was not restricted to labour issues. It is a problem
across the broad spectrum of Qatari policies and reform efforts.
Even so, Qatar’s deficits in
dealing with labour issues contrasts starkly with its response to the
3.5-year-long UAE-Saudi-led economic and diplomatic boycott that ended early
last year.
The response demonstrated
that the Gulf state has the wherewithal, resilience, and creativity to embrace
fair and accurate criticism and turn it to its advantage.
In engaging with its critics,
Qatar, an autocracy, albeit enlightened, set a standard. It became the first
Gulf state, if not the first Arab state, to do so.
Engagement meant giving human
rights groups and trade unions access to the country, allowing them to operate
and hold news conferences in Qatar, and involving them in drafting reforms and
World Cup-related model labour contracts.
This was unprecedented in a
region where local activists are behind bars or worse and foreign critics don’t
even make it onto an outbound flight.
That is not to say there were
no hiccups, such as the repeated detention of journalists seeking unfettered
access to migrant workers and their facilities. The arrests constituted failed
attempts at controlling the narrative that backfired.
In the latest gesture and in
response to fears that hospitality, transport, and security workers would be
especially vulnerable during the World Cup, Qatar announced that it would intensify
labour inspections that would include
additional health and safety checks to protect workers from exploitation.
Moreover, the labour ministry
was expected to issue a directive on the permissible
number of working hours.
Qatar's labour law restricts
workers to a maximum of 60 hours per week, including overtime which must be
paid as a 25 per cent bonus beyond regular salary. In addition, workers are
entitled to one day off per week.
Introduced in the spring of
2021, Qatar’s new
heat legislation received mixed reviews. The
International Labour Organisation (ILO) welcomed the
legislation as “an example of
evidence-based policy-making, drawing on field research on the environmental
conditions and the effectiveness of different mitigation strategies.”
However, while recognizing
that Qatar had introduced some new protections, Amnesty International asserted
that "major risks
remain and authorities have done
little to investigate the scale of heat-related deaths.”
On another front, hosting the
World Cup has also forced Qatar, albeit in a limited fashion, to come to grips
with issues like LGBT rights that do not simply violate the country’s laws but
go against its social grain as part of its quest to produce an inclusive
tournament.
A tough nut to crack
In some ways, that may have
been more difficult than reforming the labour regime if one considers the
difference between standing up for rights that potentially may garner broader
public support and the socially far more sensitive and controversial issue of
recognition of LGBT rights.
In contrast to workers’
rights, opposition to LGBT rights is deeply engrained in Qatar and other Muslim
societies. LGBT rights would likely be socially rejected, even if enshrined in
law.
The difference means that
defending LGBT and other socially controversial rights will force activists and
human and LGBT rights groups to rethink their strategies and adopt alternative,
more long-term approaches.
It also means they will have
to embrace less Western-centric attitudes frequently prevalent in the campaign
to reform Qatar's labour system.
That notion was absent when
soccer fan representative Dario Minden addressed the Qatari ambassador to
Germany, Abdulla bin Mohammed bin Saud Al Thani, a member of Qatar’s ruling
family, at a two-hour conference sponsored by the German football federation
(DFB). The gathering was convened to "intensify the discussion."
“I'm a man,
and I love men. I do — please don’t be
shocked — have sex with other men. This is normal. So please get used to it, or
stay out of football. Because the most important rule in football is football
is for everyone. It doesn’t matter if you’re lesbian if you’re gay. It’s for
everyone. For the boys. For the girls. And for everyone in between,” Mr. Minden said.
Mr. Minden’s comments were an
indication of a hardening on both sides of the divide, which further
complicated things for Qatar.
As the Gulf state sought to
navigate a ‘live and let live’ approach during the World Cup, its neighbours
and other Muslim states were adopting a more aggressive stance towards sexual
and gender diversity.
Saudi Arabia banned
rainbow-coloured products while Lebanese authorities prohibited events
during Pride Month. The UAE’s education ministry banned "discussing gender
identity, homosexuality or any other behaviour deemed unacceptable to UAE
society" in schools.
Some analysts believe that
the stepped-up opposition to LGBT rights is designed to highlight adherence to
traditional values at a time that countries like the UAE and Saudi Arabia
forger closer ties to Israel.
"Saudi Arabia and the
UAE have been reframing their relationship with Israel, which is highly
unpopular with some parts of the population," said Mostafa Minawi, a
professor of Middle Eastern and Ottoman history at Cornell University. "So
what better method is there to send a
message to the local population that they are still holding
on to their traditions?"
Shades of grey
For its part, Qatar could
have countered much of the labour criticism levelled at it had it ensured that
all its reforms, not just some, had been applied not only to World Cup projects
but to all construction sites nationwide. In doing so, it would have
demonstrated sincerity and, more fundamentally, countered the criticism
proactively.
A coalition of human rights
organizations, fan groups, and trade unions has called on FIFA to set aside a
minimum of $440 million for a compensation fund.
In addition, a recent poll
showed that seventy-three
per cent of those surveyed favoured FIFA using some of the money generated by the tournaments to compensate migrant
workers.
Qatar’s handling of illegal
recruitment fees paid by workers is another case in point. Workers have
collectively spent billions of dollars to secure employment over the last
decade despite Qatar’s outlawing of forcing migrant workers, a significant
segment of the Gulf state’s population, to pay exorbitant recruitment fees of
up to a year’s worth of wages.
Qatar opened recruitment
centres in 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, much like countries
with a more robust legal environment.
The Guardian newspaper, for
example, repeatedly reported in 2022 on migrant labour seeking employment in
Britain having been entrapped by onerous middlemen.
In the latest incident, the
paper revealed in September that Indonesian
farmhands had paid up to US$2,500
to an employment agency in Jakarta but had yet to be interviewed by a British
recruiter.
Another area where Qatar
could make a significant difference in alleviating the impact of often harsh
labour conditions and significantly enhancing its reputation would be to
consider the potential health fallout that workers experience while in the Gulf
state and after leaving it.
Migrant workers often only
experience the impact of their harsh working conditions and changed dietary
habits only once they return from Qatar. As a result, according to Nepalese
doctors and medical personnel, they frequently suffer from
kidney failure, liver and respiratory disease, depression, diabetes, and cancer.
Activists and media put the number of
World Cup-related deaths in Qatar at 6,500, a figure Ms. Burrow, the trade union chief,
described as “a myth.”
Social media and mis-and
disinformation expert Marc Owen
Jones noted in a thread on Twitter
that the figure of 6,500 stemmed from a misleading
headline in The Guardian in February 2021 that the
newspaper later amended.
The correction made clear
that the deaths were over the ten-year period since the awarding of the World
Cup hosting rights to Qatar but not all related to the tournament.
Nevertheless, Mr. Owen’s
research showed that the article has become the most retweeted English-language
article about the Qatar World Cup.
“So much of the outrage
around Qatar is held together by a single thin thread that goes back to a
sensationalist newspaper headline using misleading statistics,” Mr. Jones said.
A report by FairSquare, Mr,
McGeehan’s migrant workers consultancy, and civil society groups in five
labour-supplying countries – Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, and the
Philippines --estimated that 10,000
workers had died between 2015 and 2019
in the six member countries of the GCC,
the regional grouping.
The report implicitly
acknowledged that it was difficult, if not impossible, to determine how many
workers had died on World Cup projects as a result of work-related issues by
asserting that one out of two deaths remained unexplored.
“It appears that as many as
10,000 migrant workers from south and southeast Asia die in the Gulf every
year…and that more than one out of every two deaths is effectively unexplained,
which is to say that deaths are certified without any reference to an
underlying cause of death, instead using terms such as “natural causes” or
“cardiac arrest,” the report said.
If Nepali workers, the second
largest contingent in Qatar, are anything to go by, the number of work-related
deaths among workers is relatively small.
Nepalese authorities,
including the country's embassy in Doha and the Ministry of Labour, Employment
and Social Security, estimated that out of 400,000 Nepalis in Qatar, 100 to 150
die yearly in their workplaces.
In response to questions in
parliament, the Indian government reported that 420 people
out of 691,000 nationals in Qatar had died in 2021.
Fan attitudes have impact
Anticipating and being seen
as taking the lead in reforms rather than being perceived as having been
dragged into them is particularly important, with polls showing that fans care
about the issues involved.
For example, a survey in 2022
suggested that 41 percent of Americans, 51 percent of American sports fans, and
61 percent of avid fans said Qatari human rights violations reduced their
interest in the World Cup.
A YouGov poll commissioned by Amnesty International found that 67
per cent of the 17,477 participants in the survey in Europe, Central and Latin America,
the United States, and Kenya wanted their national soccer associations to speak
out publicly about human rights issues associated with the Qatar World Cup.
If the surveys are anything
to go by, Qatar has lost the battle for hearts and minds of fans in the United
States and Europe and potentially in labour-supplying nations although there is
a dearth of data from those countries. Equally, there is a lack of data on fan
attitudes towards Qatar in much of Africa and a large swath of Asia.
One indication of potentially
differing attitudes may be whether cricket fans respond to an announcement that
Saudi oil
giant Aramco will sponsor all of the Dubai-based International Cricket
Council's events until the end of 2023.
The Council is the only
international sports association that was seduced by the UAE to move its
headquarters from Europe to the Gulf state.
Qatar’s failure to make its
case was also reflected in the drop in
numbers of European fans, with the exception of
English supporters, planning to attend the Qatar World Cup compared to past tournaments,
including the 2018 finals in Russia.
Perhaps the starkest drop was
in France where only a sixth of fans who attended matches in Russia was heading
for Qatar. Only sixty percent of Dutch fans who travelled to past World Cups
intended to go to Qatar.
European national soccer
associations attributed the drop to the cost of accommodation, concern about
availability and quality of affordable lodging, higher airfares, and Qatar’s
more restrictive visa and entry regulations.
With the World Cup being held
at the crossroads of the Middle East, Asia and Africa, the drop suggests that
Qatar could witness a different fan demography with Middle Easterners, Asians,
and Africans being far more prominent.
Fan attitudes, like broader
public perceptions of Qatar, are far more critical to the Gulf state than they
would have been if Qatar were a run-of-the-mill example of nation branding.
For Qatar, sports and nation
branding was about much more.
Sports was part of a much
broader soft power effort that aimed to ensure that the international community
had a stake in coming to Qatar's rescue in an emergency, much as it did in 1991
when a US-led coalition that included Arab states forced Iraqi troops to
withdraw from Kuwait.
With a citizenry of only
300,000, Qatar cannot defend itself against a conventional military attack,
irrespective of how much sophisticated weaponry it acquires.
Qatar's soft power strategy
involves, besides sports, ensuring that it is relevant to the international
community, a mediation-driven foreign policy; the creation of a world-class
airline and air traffic hub; hosting of the most extensive US military base in
the Middle East; sponsorship of high-profile museums and arts events; and
acquisition of eye-catching real estate and investment in multi-national blue
chips.
Against that backdrop, Qatar,
to sustain the tournament’s reputational value, will have to push forward with
social, economic, and political reforms, even if activist attention moves on.
Qatar's ability and
willingness to move ahead post-World Cup with reforms may be one litmus test of
Qatar’s multi-pronged soft power bid.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an
award-winning journalist and scholar, an 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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