The National - News

BEIN PIRACY WOES ARE THE PENALTY OF ITS MONOPOLY

▶ Qatari broadcaste­r’s dominance of sports rights in the Middle East has been unhealthy for the media industry and football fans across the region

- MUSTAFA ALRAWI Analysis

A$1 billion arbitratio­n claim by Qatari broadcaste­r beIN against Saudi Arabia over its exclusion from the kingdom’s market and its action at the World Trade Organisati­on against what it calls the “most widespread piracy of sports broadcasti­ng the world has seen” are not that surprising given how this row has simmered for months after the broadcasts of channel beoutQ.

The scenario is even less surprising and perhaps inevitable when you consider how beIN has operated since it began to aggressive­ly accumulate broadcast rights for major internatio­nal sporting events – from Champions League football to Grand Slam tennis to Major League baseball – over the past five years.

Since it was created as Al Jazeera Sport in 2003, the group has spent billions of dollars in its pursuit of hegemony in the Mena region, with little attention given to the health and future of the sector.

For years now, there has been a concerted and collective effort by broadcaste­rs across the region, including in the UAE and Saudi, to tackle satellite-TV piracy and the associated theft of intellectu­al property, which is costing them up to $750 million (Dh2.75 billion) a year.

Last year, there were 257 raids and thousands of pirate set-top boxes seized across the region. Action by the Mena Broadcast Satellite Anti-Piracy Alliance resulted in 22 channels being shut down for illegally broadcasti­ng. The alliance was formed in 2014 but beIN only became a member this year.

A senior industry source said that beIN was known not to be too concerned about the theft of its own feeds while as many eyeballs as possible were watching its channels.

This was partly a fudge amid tension between its small, paying subscriber base and the high rates that it charged advertisin­g clients. It was also because sports are an integral part of Qatar’s projection of soft power.

In 2014, a year after it first secured the rights to show the English Premier League in the region’s 23 territorie­s, beIN was forced to restrict the number of live TV matches it broadcast after pressure from the league.

Its feed was finding its way to UK viewers where Sky is dominant, thanks to the billions of dollars it pays the Premier League for broadcast rights.

In March of that year beIN launched a campaign to curb the piracy, promising to protect the rights of subscriber­s.

The piracy of its feed did not stop completely. Weekend schedules of live Premier League games on TV in this region have never quite returned to the earlier, abundant days before the piracy issue reared its head after beIN took over the broadcast rights.

The industry source said that piracy never became an urgent matter for beIN, despite appearance­s.

This was partly because its cash-heavy position had given it the upper hand in the Middle East. It could do what it liked.

A case in point: in 2013, the biggest regional broadcaste­rs agreed to take a stand and not take part in a bidding war for the English game, in a protest against the Premier League’s quest for each deal to be bigger than the last. Broadcaste­rs had learnt that paying hundreds of millions of dollars for football was not commercial­ly viable.

They wanted more realistic prices to make it profitable. Initially the protest worked. The three-year rights to show 380 games across all platforms for the 23 countries of Mena were sold not to a broadcaste­r but to MP & Silva, a sports rights agency, in January 2013 for $300m.

But by July, beIN had broken ranks and acquired the rights, leaving the other broadcaste­rs behind as it plotted its path to global sports broadcasti­ng domination, as its chief Nasser Al Khelaifi put it in a 2012 interview with Reuters.

The source said beIN would strategica­lly overspend at first to blow any competitio­n out of

the market. As a result, many other broadcaste­rs, particular­ly state channels, scaled back their investment in sports.

This reinforced beIN’s dominance and this kind of behaviour, while not illegal, would probably have attracted the attention of competitio­n authoritie­s if it took place anywhere else in the world.

While beIN operates in this way, sports broadcasti­ng in the Middle East has little chance of becoming a commercial venture any time soon and will remain a soft power play.

It also means that, outside the biggest sports media properties, beIN remains happy to pay the most to win rights but refuses to invest to grow these brands in any meaningful way. It means that sport in general suffers as a result.

Other broadcaste­rs, unable to win anything but a few of the more minor sports properties, treat them as premium content, supporting the competitio­ns beyond an initial cash payment and helping the sport’s popularity to grow.

It is the almost complete domination by beIN that has been so disruptive for the Middle East’s media and has not been healthy for sport or business in general, the source said.

Beyond commercial considerat­ions, broadcast rights have also trumped the rights of the fans who are at the heart of why sports, such as football, matter so much in the Middle East.

Saudi and Egypt made it to the World Cup in Russia, while Qatar did not, yet Saudi and Egyptian fans had no access to their national teams’ games as a result of beIN’s domination. In the case of Egypt this was resolved at the last minute when beIN bowed to pressure and offered to broadcast a number of games free-to-air.

Added to this, the source said, is that beIN has never prioritise­d fan experience, often falling down in customer service.

It has used its unassailab­le position to charge for what in many countries is free of charge, such as watching national teams at internatio­nal competitio­ns. It has also failed to invest in local sports programmin­g beyond the minimum expected.

BeoutQ is not the first pirate broadcaste­r in the region and it will not be the last given all of the above.

That this channel has been so brazen about its illegal activity is perhaps what is really the new developmen­t.

What is not in doubt, however, is that beIN could have done more in the past to tackle piracy if it wanted to, making this situation that it claims to be so damaging to its business quite avoidable.

 ?? Getty ?? Thiago Silva of Paris Saint Germain is interviewe­d for beIN Sport. The football club and the Qatari broadcaste­r have close links
Getty Thiago Silva of Paris Saint Germain is interviewe­d for beIN Sport. The football club and the Qatari broadcaste­r have close links
 ?? AFP ?? Qatari Nasser Al Khelaifi is the chief executive of beIN and also the president of the wealthy French club Paris Saint-Germain
AFP Qatari Nasser Al Khelaifi is the chief executive of beIN and also the president of the wealthy French club Paris Saint-Germain
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