Getting it Right: A Post-Qatar Roadmap for Activists
By James M.
Dorsey
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Qatar 2022
put the myth of a separation of sports and politics to bed.
Like in
Qatar, human, worker, and LGBT rights are likely to be left, right, and centre
as other Gulf and North African states
move centre stage as
hosts of and bidders for some of the world’s foremost mega-sporting events, the
2030 World Cup and the 2036 Olympics, and major Asian tournaments, including
the Asian Cup and the Asian Games.
For FIFA, upholding the fiction of a separation of sports and
politics will increasingly be perceived as a farce. At the same time, the world
soccer body’s decisions on what protests are legitimate during a World Cup,
like in Qatar (LGBT, yes, Iran conditionally), will be seen
as political.
The 2023
FIFA Club World Cup in Morocco in February and the Asian Games later that year
in Qatar are not on par with the World Cup in terms of global reach. Nonetheless,
they are litmus tests for hosts and activists alike.
The
responsiveness of hosts to activists’ criticism of their adherence to human,
worker, and LGBT rights will indicate the degree to which image is the foremost
driver of hosting.
In doing so,
the Moroccan and Qatari tournaments, and similar events in the region scheduled
for later in the decade, will also test the validity of notions that reputation laundering or
sportswashing, an
effort to distract from tarnished rights records, is why autocrats host
tournaments.
Finally,
responsiveness will provide insights into what segments of global public
opinion autocratic hosts care about, given that activists primarily impact
public sentiment in democratic countries where the media report their campaigns
that address abuse of rights.
A key
determinant of activists' effectiveness will be their willingness to distance
themselves from critics whose positioning is not a concern for achieving and
upholding rights but is defined by bias, prejudice, and bigotry.
Furthermore,
the forthcoming events will suggest what lessons activists have learnt from
their campaign during the 12-year run-up to Qatar’s successful hosting of one
of the most exhilarating World Cups in the tournament’s history.
Activists’
pressure produced a significant enhancement of worker rights in Qatar, even if
the improvements and implementation of reforms fell short of their demands.
Worker
rights are low-hanging fruit.
As a result,
the campaign to improve the working and living conditions of migrant labour in
Qatar frames what may be achievable when it comes to far more complex,
culturally sensitive issues that, in contrast to labour, evoke deep-seated
passions such as gender and sexual diversity.
Qatar
indicates what reforms autocracies, particularly in Muslim-majority states, may
entertain; what compromises are possible to improve the well-being of discriminated
or disenfranchised groups, even if they fall short of full recognition of
rights; and what areas do not lend themselves to compromise.
Take political
rights. Freedoms of expression, the media, and assembly are indivisible. One
either can express oneself and organise, or one cannot. It's black and white.
There is no middle ground.
Worker
rights are a different animal. The ability to freely change jobs, travel, seek
regulatory and legal redress of employers’ abuse; enjoy proper working and
living conditions; demand respect of rights; have a minimum wage as a
benchmark; and elect worker council representatives, if adequately implemented,
significantly improve a worker's immediate circumstances and quality of life.
Demands for
independent trade unions, the right to strike, and collective bargaining are
legitimate and appropriate, yet unlikely to be negotiable because they would
entail or open the door to a change of an autocratic political system, if not
regime change.
If
independent trade unions are allowed, why not political parties and pressure
groups? If labour strikes are legal, so should protests and demonstrations. If
collective bargaining is a fixture, why should other groups not be able to push
for rights collectively?
These are
issues that challenge the nature of autocracy. Of course, there is nothing
wrong with that; on the contrary. Nevertheless, activists will have to keep in
mind that workers are likely to want immediate improvements in their working
and living conditions initially, and only once those have been achieved will
they be more concerned about political rights.
A similar
logic plays out on socially controversial issues, particularly LGBT rights,
where government policy is aligned with public sentiment. With Muslim
populations and Protestants in Africa deeply hostile to LGBT rights, activists
will have to be creative in seeking to change a community’s circumstances.
One
potential tactic may be to build on the positions of credible, albeit often
controversial Muslim scholars, such as Tunisia’s Rached Ghannouchi, an Islamist
politician and thinker, and Salman al Audah, a prominent and controversial
cleric who has been languishing for years in a Saudi prison.
The two men
denounce homosexuality as a sin but deny temporal and religious authorities the
right to take punitive action. Instead, they position homosexuality as a sin
for which practitioners should be held accountable in a next life.
Speaking in
2015, Mr. Ghannouchi said: “We don't approve. But Islam does not spy on folks.
It preserves privacy. Everyone leads his/her life and is
responsible before his/her creator.”
Mr. Al-Audah
argued that "even though homosexuality is considered a sin in all the
Semitic holy books, it does not require any punishment in this world. One of
the fundamentals of Islam is man's freedom to act as he wants. But one must
also take the consequences."
Mr. Al-Audah
went on to say that “homosexuals are not deviating from
Islam. Homosexuality
is a grave sin, but those who say that homosexuals deviate from Islam are the
real deviators. By condemning homosexuals to death, they are committing a
graver sin than homosexuality itself.”
Theirs is a
formula that neither legalises or legitimises homosexuality nor removes the
stigma. But it does avoid criminalization and significantly enhances the lives
of members of the LGBT community.
It builds on
arrangements in Muslim-majority countries like Indonesia and Turkey, where
homosexuality has not been outlawed but remains socially fraught and
challenging, as well as Qatar's "don't ask, don't tell" approach
during the 2022 World Cup that was rooted in former US President Bill Clinton's
attitude towards members of the LGBT community in the military.
It is likely
a significant steppingstone to full recognition of LGBT rights in a Muslim
world where success may only be achieved step by step.
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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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