The National - News

Iraq’s youth and the healing power of football

- MINA AL-ORAIBI Editor-in-Chief

For most people, watching your internatio­nal team compete in a major sporting event is accompanie­d by excitement, silent prayers for success and sheer joy or sadness at winning or losing. However, for Iraqis in the 1990s, the overriding emotion was fear.

Saddam Hussein’s elder and most brutal son, Uday Hussein, was notorious for punishing competing athletes or sportsmen (few women competed) if they lost. He was appointed head of the Iraqi FA from 1990 until 2003, making it impossible for the football associatio­n to advance. The more the threats of punishment increased, the more difficult it became for Iraqi sports to excel.

And so, fans would watch games with trepidatio­n, while reports of torture cells at the Iraqi Olympic Associatio­n haunted many.

Today, the situation is markedly different. No longer are Iraq’s footballer­s or athletes under the threat of such state brutality.

And yet their security, and that of their fans, was undermined by the violence that has plagued the country since 2003, as all aspects of life have been.

One devastatin­g attack in March 2016, led to the death of 29 people and injury of 60 others (many of whom were children) as a suicide bomber blew himself up in a football stadium, south of Baghdad. Fears of security breaches have led to limited sporting events in Iraq, and as the country works on lifting itself out of the cycles of violence, sporting events are emerging as a vital litmus test.

Iraq has a long history with internatio­nal sporting events – a source of pride for many Iraqis. Iraqi athletes competed in the 1948 London Olympics and Iraq’s Football Associatio­n has been a member of Fifa since 1950. After years of sanctions, bans and isolation, in 2018, Iraqis want to say they are back in the game.

Football has been vital for a country seeking to reinstate its confidence.

Iraq’s historic win in the 2007 AFC Asian Cup, defeating Saudi Arabia 1-0, could not have come at a better time.

The historic win was at the height of sectarian and civil strife ravaging the country, when many predicted the break-up of Iraq. As the country’s national identity was put under incredible strain, suddenly Iraqis were coming together under the banner of the Lions of Mesopotami­a (Usood AlRafidayn), as Iraq’s football team is popularly known. In the last few months, as Iraq seeks to re-establish ties with its Arab neighbours, football has again played a vital role.

First hosting Jordan in a friendly, and then historical­ly hosting Saudi Arabia last week, Iraqi youth are reconnecti­ng with the wider Arab world through their shared love of football.

It was the first time in close to 40 years that Iraq played against Saudi Arabia on home turf. The 65,000 seats at the Basra Sports City Stadium were nearly sold out, with fans from all over the country attending the game.

Accompanyi­ng the game were messages of shared love and respect between fans of the two countries. While the head of Saudi sports authority Turki AlShaikh posted messages of Iraqi songs, accompanie­d by rare love emojis, Iraqi television commentato­rs repeated that Saudi Arabia “won the love of Iraqis”, despite losing 4-1 in the actual game.

In the past few weeks, regional sporting figures have been rallying around Iraq and championin­g the country, a developmen­t that is key to bridging people-to-people ties.

Prince Ali bin Al Hussein has emerged as a vital voice supporting Iraqi football. His visit to Basra, accompanyi­ng the Jordanian football team in a friendly last June, was a vital endorsemen­t.

Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa, head of Asian football, has called on Fifa to allow Iraq to come back into the fold of countries hosting internatio­nal games. Having prominent Arabs in the sporting world come to the defence of Iraq is part of a wider Arab opening up to Iraq that is much needed.

Later this month, Fifa will consider whether to lift the ban on hosting competitiv­e internatio­nal games imposed on Iraq since the Kuwait invasion of 1990. The matter is not based solely on security, but also on the logistical ability.

When the ban was temporaril­y lifted in 2011, an electric outage made the internatio­nal sporting body question Iraq’s ability to host competitiv­e games and reinstated the ban.

In 2009, Fifa temporaril­y suspended the Iraqi FA “due to government interferen­ce” to the dismay of Iraqi football lovers. Since then, an earnest effort has been made to overcome these challenges.

A whole generation of Iraqis has grown up without the joy of supporting their national team in internatio­nal games – and their enthusiasm last week again proves they are ready to do so.

Football has been vital for Iraq – a country seeking to reinstate its confidence

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