Protest emerges as a mixed blessing for World Cup host Qatar
By James M.
Dorsey
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Protest on
the soccer pitch has proven to be a mixed blessing for World Cup host Qatar,
exposing double standards in the Gulf state’s position as well as that of its
critics.
Qatar
embraced protest when it supported Qatari policies, such as the Gulf state's
increasingly assertive denunciation of double standards in Western criticism of
discrimination against LGBT people or its refusal to establish diplomatic
relations with Israel
in the absence of a resolution of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
However,
protesters and foreign media quickly encountered the limits of Qatari tolerance
and notions of freedom of expression when they touched on politically sensitive
issues, ranging from support for LGBT rights to solidarity with demonstrators
in Iran, who have defied a brutal crackdown by security forces in more than two
months of anti-government manifestations.
As a result,
the debate on double standards at times amounted to the kettle calling the pot
black.
That is not
to question the legitimacy of criticism levelled by Qatar and its critics at
each other. However, it is to note that both parties’ credibility is in
question because of their inconsistencies and failures to put their own houses
in order.
“On one
level, the World Cup is unfolding smoothly. On another, we go from crisis to
crisis," said a journalist covering the tournament for a major Western
news organisation.
Photographers
were often on the frontline as Qatari authorities stopped them from snapping
pictures of security forces preventing fans from wearing clothing to matches or
taking into stadiums paraphernalia that signalled support for Iranian protesters
or LGBT rights.
‘The real
test case will be when the United States plays Iran. That could be the
crescendo in the clash over what protesters and media can and cannot do,” said
another journalist.
The November
29 match is likely the World Cup's most politically charged game, with talks to
revive the 2015 international agreement that curbed the Islamic republic's
nuclear programme all but dead and Iraq-mediated negotiations with archrival
Saudi Arabia suspended.
Iran accuses
the United States, Saudi Arabia, and Israel of inciting the sustained
anti-government protests.
The US
Soccer Federation joined the fray with Iran ahead of the two nations' World Cup
match when it briefly displayed Iran's national flag on social media without the emblem of the Islamic
Republic, saying the
move was in support of protesters in Iran.
Iran accused
the federation of removing the name of God from their national flag and said it
would complain to FIFA. However, US Soccer later restored the Islamic republic’s
flag on social media.
Meanwhile, Qatari
nationals, intending to protest against Western double
standards in criticism of the Gulf state, didn't encounter problems entering the stadium to watch
Germany's group stage match against Spain.
During the
game, Qataris displayed pictures of former German national team player Mesut
Özil, a German-born descendant of Turkish immigrants, while covering their
mouths in protest against German double standards.
Mr. Özil quit
the German team after becoming a target of racist abuse and a scapegoat for
Germany’s early World Cup exit in 2018.
The Qatari demonstration was in response to Germany’s
team covering
their mouths at a group photo in advance of an earlier
match against Japan in protest against FIFA president Gianni Infantino’s banning
players from wearing One Love bands during games.
In the same vein,
prominent Qataris wore pro-Palestinian
armbands to the Germany Japan match to counter
the pro-LGBT One Love band sported by German Interior Minister Nancy Faeser during
the game.
Qatar’s emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad
Al Thani, signalled the Gulf state’s greater assertiveness in countering
criticism when he lamented some three weeks before the kickoff of the World Cup
that Qatar had been "subjected to an unprecedented campaign,”
scrutiny, and scorn “that no host country has faced.”
In an indication that human rights,
labour, and LGBT groups may be losing leverage, the emir said that "we
initially dealt with the matter in good faith, and even considered some of
criticism as positive and useful… (But) it soon became clear that the campaign
tends to continue and expand to include fabrications and double standards that
were so ferocious that it has unfortunately prompted many people to question
real reasons and motives behind this campaign."
The critics’ problem is their past
failure to tackle with equal ferocity issues of human rights, prejudice, and
bigotry in the run-up to the 2018 Russian World Cup, as well as to separate the
wheat from the chafe by distancing themselves from criticism of Qatar that was
laced with bias and racism.
In doing so, critics are as much their
own worst enemy as they have been drivers of social change in Qatar.
By allowing Qatar to deflect criticism
by calling into question critics' credibility, activists have enabled the Gulf
state to take its counteroffensive to the next level.
A week into the World Cup, Qatar was
reviewing, according to the Financial Times, its substantial investments in London after
the city's transport authority suspended advertising from the Gulf state
because of the controversies over worker and LGBT rights.
Qatari investments include London’s
landmark Harrods department store; The Shard, an iconic 72-storey skyscraper; and
Canary Wharf, part of the city’s central business district. Qatar also owns
Chelsea Barracks, the Savoy and Grosvenor House hotels, 22 per cent of
Sainsbury’s supermarkets, six per cent of Barclays bank, and 20 per cent of Heathrow
airport.
“Countries
like…Qatar…view their investments as strategic
bribes to mute criticism and resist reforms,” said Radha Stirling, a London-based lawyer
who represents expatriates in the Gulf who run into legal difficult
To be fair, Qatar was one of 11 countries in the Middle East, Africa, and South Asia
that were banned in 2019 from advertising by Transport for London on the
grounds of human rights violations. Nevertheless, the agency allowed some
Qatari advertising promoting the Gulf state as a
tourist destination until last week's World Cup kickoff, when it decided to
implement the ban fully.
Even so, the list reinforced the
notion of double standards by failing to include China at the height of its
brutal crackdown on Turkic Muslims in the northwestern province of Xinjiang; Russia
that was annexing Ukrainian territory, repressing LGBT people, and attempting
to assassinate its critics at home and abroad; and Israel with its increasingly
racial policies towards Palestinians.
Qatar is likely to be the first of
numerous rights-focussed Middle Eastern battlegrounds, with countries like
Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt hosting or preparing bids to host multiple major
sporting events, including Asian Cup competitions, the 2030 World Cup, and the
2036 Summer Olympics.
The bids constitute a rich and legitimate
hunting ground for human, worker, and LBGT rights activists. However, their
effectiveness will, to a significant extent, depend on their ability to put
their own house in order.
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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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