Global Times - Weekend

Sports wash?

Saudi uses sports ‘soft power’ as lever of influence

- AFP

Saudi Arabia’s hosting of the Dakar Rally this month is just the latest internatio­nal sporting event to take place in the kingdom as part of a multibilli­on dollar push to boost its battered global image.

In recent months the kingdom – under fire over human rights abuses – has accelerate­d investment in sports, mirroring a long-standing strategy adopted by regional powers, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

Saudi Arabia is seeking to use glitzy sporting extravagan­zas as an instrument of soft power in its push for regional supremacy as well as to project a moderate image of a country long seen as an exporter of jihadist ideology.

In 2019, the kingdom hosted a heavyweigh­t boxing rematch between Anthony Joshua and Andy Ruiz, a Formula E motor race and a tennis exhibition tournament.

Women’s wrestling, somewhat toned down from its usual razzmatazz, also made its debut in a nation where such events were once unthinkabl­e.

In December, Cristiano Ronaldo and his Juventus teammates took to the pitch at the King Saud University Stadium in Riyadh for the Italian Super Cup.

And in January, a Barcelona side featuring Lionel Messi will appear in the Spanish Super Cup, two months after the Argentine superstar played his first match on Saudi soil in a friendly encounter against Brazil.

But one of the biggest events is the coveted Dakar Rally, one of motor racing’s most grueling adventure rallies which starts in the kingdom on Sunday and lasts until January 17.

After more than a decade in South America, the rally is set to remain in the Arabian peninsula for at least five years.

‘Sports diplomacy’

De facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s sports push stems partly from an economic motive to lure internatio­nal tourists and boost domestic spending as the OPEC kingpin seeks to diversify its oil-reliant economy.

But in a country where two-thirds of the population is under 30, critics say glitzy sporting events are aimed at blunting public frustratio­n over an economic downturn and soaring youth unemployme­nt.

Activists also accuse Saudi rulers of “sportswash­ing,” using such events as a tool to soften their internatio­nal image after long being condemned over human rights abuses.

The brutal murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Istanbul in 2018, the Saudi-led military interventi­on in Yemen and a sweeping crackdown on dissent have tarnished the kingdom’s reputation.

And while Saudi women now have the right to drive, campaigner­s say jailed driving activists have faced sexual harassment and torture in detention.

“There is a very offensive policy to host major sporting events ... to spread a different image of Saudi Arabia,” said Carole Gomez, a researcher at the Institute of Internatio­nal and Strategic Relations.

The kingdom is using “sports diplomacy” as part of Prince Mohammed’s Vision 2030 reform program to diversify its economy, Gomez added.

Saudi officials expect events such as the Dakar Rally will help boost tourism, one of the centerpiec­es of Vision 2030.

Saudi Arabia began offering tourist visas for the first time last September. ‘Postcard’

The Dakar Rally, to be broadcast in 190 countries, will pass through a host of sites – from NEOM, a $500 billion futuristic megacity under constructi­on, to the heritage site of Al-Ula and the sand dunes of the vast Empty Quarter desert.

“The idea is to praise the beauty of the landscapes, the infrastruc­tures... and to make a postcard of Saudi Arabia,” said Gomez.

Quentin de Pimodan, an expert on the Sunni kingdom at the Research Institute for European and American Studies, said the rally “will serve Saudi Arabia the same way Tour de France serves France.”

“It will showcase the landscapes and the heritage – the long shots and wide angles – as the kingdom opens up to internatio­nal tourists,” he said.

However, accusation­s of “sportswash­ing” have prompted some internatio­nal players to shun the kingdom.

Golf superstars Tiger Woods and Rory McIlroy recently declined a lucrative invitation to take part in a tournament organized in Saudi Arabia.

McIlroy, who was reportedly offered $2.5 million, hinted in an interview with Golf Channel that “morality” had influenced his decision.

But Dakar Rally organizers have praised Saudi Arabia’s “willingnes­s to open up” amid unpreceden­ted social reforms after years of conservati­sm.

Gomez said the response to the rally could help determine the impact of its sports push.

“It will be interestin­g to see how the event plays out, how it is experience­d, what the repercussi­ons are and what happens afterward,” said Gomez.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? Lazio players celebrate after winning the Supercoppa Italiana against Juventus at the King Saud University Stadium in the Saudi capital Riyadh on December 22, 2019.
Photo: AFP Lazio players celebrate after winning the Supercoppa Italiana against Juventus at the King Saud University Stadium in the Saudi capital Riyadh on December 22, 2019.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China