The National - News

Growing risks to Qatar staging World Cup

▶ Allegation­s of corruption and increased political dissent threaten football tournament in 2022, report states

- NOOR NANJI London

A new report into preparatio­ns for the 2022 World Cup in Qatar says there is a growing possibilit­y that the country will not host the tournament at all.

A risk report by management consultanc­y Cornerston­e Global assessed the impact of the rift between Qatar and the four countries – Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt – that broke economic, transport and diplomatic ties with the emirate in June.

The report warned constructi­on companies working on what will be the most expensive World Cup, with a $200 billion infrastruc­ture programme, that it is a “high-risk project” and said “tournament insiders and regional experts have both stated to us that it is far from certain Doha will actually host the tournament”.

Titled Qatar in Focus: Is the Fifa World Cup 2022 in Danger?, the study states the political risk is significan­t enough for western diplomats to privately express doubts about whether the tournament can take place as planned.

“The reasons for this are many and include open allegation­s of corruption – both in the bidding process and in the infrastruc­ture developmen­t,” the report states. “There are numerous reports coming out of Doha confirming increased political dissent from local tribes, who make up the majority of the population.”

The possibilit­y of instabilit­y within Qatar meant those working on, or seeking contracts for World Cup infrastruc­ture were at greater risk of not getting paid with “no realistic ability to enforce any legal contracts”.

Contractor­s are increasing­ly turning to internatio­nal arbitratio­n to force Qatari authoritie­s to pay for completed work.

In 2015, about 30 cases involving Qatar went to the Internatio­nal Chamber of Commerce arbitratio­n body, whereas in the 10 years before 2015, five did.

“Given the current political situation … it is certainly possible that the tournament will not be held in Qatar. Any cancellati­on of Qatar hosting World Cup 2022 will likely be abrupt and will leave contractor­s in a precarious situation that may not be easily resolved.”

Sources working in constructi­on told the Cornerston­e Global researcher­s that “while not panicking yet” contractor­s are feeling the effects of the border closures, which have made logistics more complicate­d and – according to five project managers interviewe­d for the report – 20 to 25 per cent more costly. By August, building projects were a month behind schedule.

The researcher­s also revealed that “sources within the project have indicated that several members of the Qatar 2022 supreme committee have threatened to resign over excessive interferen­ce by senior officials on spending and allegation­s of corruption”.

Qatar accused the authors of the report of having “an affiliatio­n” to the countries that imposed the boycott.

But Ghanem Nuseibeh, founder of Cornerston­e Global and a visiting fellow at King’s College, London, denied any connection. “Absolutely not. No one in Saudi Arabia, the UAE or anywhere in the Gulf had any input at all – neither funding it [the report] nor commission­ing it nor paying for it nor benefiting from it in any way at all, as far as I’m concerned. That is pure speculatio­n [by Qatar]. No one outside of the UK and Europe had any input into that report or any interest in it,” he said.

He acknowledg­ed expressing personal views on Twitter, but insisted the report is “very objective, very impartial”.

Nor was the report commission­ed by any group or individual, he said, but was simply part of the service the company provides for clients.

“They [the Qataris] haven’t actually refuted or denied any of the findings over the report,” Mr Nuseibeh said. “The report was written based on extensive on the ground research, talking to people who are involved with it.”

Mr Nuseibeh pointed out that his company’s first report on the Qatar World Cup, in 2011, endorsed the event, which was still on the company website.

“A couple of years later, we wrote another article, which I co-authored, when the corruption allegation­s started cropping up, saying that if Qataris wanted to succeed, they needed to come clean about those allegation­s, and to speak to others in the region – including the UAE – to see if they could do some sort of a co-host to strengthen their position. That was in 2013-2014,” Mr Nuseibeh said.

“In 2014, I wrote an article for Harvard, again on the corruption issues, and again suggesting ways in which Qatar could essentiall­y save the day, because the risk has been increasing over the years since they’ve been awarded the World Cup.

“And then, of course, you have this latest report. So we’ve been publicly following and talking about it for six or seven years, and the risk has been piling up. The risk has increased significan­tly to a point where our clients, who are based predominan­tly in the UK and Europe, need to know that if they want to enter a contract in Qatar for the Fifa bid, they need to be aware of the risks.

“What the report aims to do is highlight those risks for anyone who wants to go there. The report doesn’t say ‘the World Cup is going to be cancelled.’ It simply says there is an increased political risk of that happening. And secondly, it highlights risks that have become commonplac­e.”

The Qatar 2022 supreme committee for delivery and legacy said there was “absolutely no risk to the future of the first World Cup in the Middle East”.

What the report aims to do is highlight risks. The report doesn’t say ‘the World Cup is going to be cancelled’ GHANEM NUSEIBEH Founder, Cornerston­e Global

 ??  ?? Constructi­on at the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium in Doha, a World Cup 2022 venue. A report has highlighte­d the risks in infrastruc­ture developmen­t for the tournament
Constructi­on at the Khalifa Internatio­nal Stadium in Doha, a World Cup 2022 venue. A report has highlighte­d the risks in infrastruc­ture developmen­t for the tournament

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