The National - News

Iraq’s fans enjoy first competitiv­e club tie since ban

- Agence France-Presse

The match might have ended 1-1, but for Iraqi football fans Tuesday’s tie between Baghdad’s Al Zawraa and Beirut’s Al Ahed will be one for the record books.

It was the first internatio­nal competitiv­e club game to be played on Iraqi soil in more than 20 years after Fifa lifted a ban on the war-torn country.

“The world saw that Iraq was at the level and that it had the capacity to host a championsh­ip,” fan Ali Essam said.

From the early morning, cars lined up at checkpoint­s set up at the entrances to Karbala, the Shiite holy city about 100 kilometres south of Baghdad.

Buses of Al Zawraa fans drapped in the club’s signature white flags arrived in their dozens, with supporters filling Karbala’s 30,000-seat stadium almost to full capacity.

“It’s an important game for us,” Al Zawraa’s manager Ayub Oudisho said before the Asian Football Confederat­ion Cup fifth-round match.

“We’re playing in front of our fans and we have to take advantage,” said Oudisho, whose team drew against Al Ahed when they squared off in Beirut in February.

Iraq was prohibited from hosting internatio­nal games since the early 1990s until Fifa ruled in March to bring it back into the full internatio­nal fold.

After first allowing the return of friendly games last year, global footballin­g authoritie­s finally agreed to let foreign teams come for competitiv­e games after assuring that the security conditions were fine.

The return of internatio­nal competitio­ns has been seen as major progress by Iraqis and their government, as the country looks to attract investment and change its image after years of violence.

But still only three stadiums in the country have been given the greenlight to host the ties.

They are the stadium in Karbala, the country’s most modern arena in the southern city of Basra, and the main stadium in Iraqi Kurdistan’s capital of Erbil.

Even though his team did not win, Ali Essam was still positive after a draw result.

“The most important thing is not the result but the club, which is the pride of the entire country,” he said.

 ?? AFP ?? Lebanese club Al Ahed, yellow, played hosts Al Zawraa in Karbala on Tuesday
AFP Lebanese club Al Ahed, yellow, played hosts Al Zawraa in Karbala on Tuesday

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