The Guardian (USA)

Newcastle and Manchester United fans unite to condemn sportswash­ing

- Jamie Jackson

Groups of Newcastle United and Manchester United fans have joined forces before the teams meet on Sunday to call for a ban on the sale of clubs to states who could use their ownership for sportswash­ing human rights abuses.

NUFC Fans Against Sportswash­ing and United Against Sportwashi­ng issued a joint statement in the buildup to the game at St James’ Park. Newcastle are majority-owned by Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), while the Qatari banker Sheikh Jassim bin Hamad al-Thani is trying to buy Manchester United.

The Premier League approved the Newcastle takeover after saying it received “legally binding assurances” the Saudi state would not have control of the club. Its chief executive, Richard

Masters, said this week he could not comment on whether Newcastle’s links with Saudi Arabia were being reinvestig­ated in light of a recent US court case. A brief filed on its behalf in a case involving the PGA Tour and LIV Golf describes the PIF as “a sovereign instrument­ality of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia” and Newcastle’s chairman, Yasir al-Rumayyan, as “a sitting minister of the Saudi government”.

Sheikh Jassim has said he has bid for Manchester United as an independen­tly wealthy individual via his Nine Two Foundation and that his offer is not connected to Qatar’s ruler, Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani.

The joint statement said: “While NUFC play MUFC on Sunday, groups of fans from both clubs will be united in a common cause, regardless of the result on the pitch. We are Newcastle United and Manchester United fans standing together to call for an end to the sale of our historic clubs to states which use them to sportswash their human rights abuses.”

The statement called for “full transparen­cy” from Masters regarding Newcastle, including publishing “what the ‘legal and binding assurances’ given to the Premier League were”. In relation to Sheikh Jassim’s interest in Manchester

United, the fans said: “This follows the exposure of Qatari human rights abuses during the World Cup. We know that Qatar has a law No. (25) of 2002 which makes any significan­t investment subject to direct supervisio­n of the state.”

On Thursday the Premier League approved tougher measures for its owners’ and directors’ test that would bar anyone found to have committed human rights abuses from owning a club, based on the Global Human Rights Sanctions Regulation­s.

“This is welcome,” the fans said. “However, we remain concerned that an individual from a repressive regime can still become an owner if it is not made clear that the approval of a significan­t investment is dictated by the ruling family in these Gulf states … As football fans, regardless

of our club colours we believe dictatorsh­ips such as Abu Dhabi, Saudi

Arabia and Qatar should be disqualifi­ed from owning clubs because of their appalling human rights records. Further, pumping money disproport­ionately into a small number of clubs distorts the fairness of the game.”

 ?? Barratt/AMA/Getty Images ?? A Newcastle fan draped in a Saudi Arabia flag in October 2021. Photograph: Robbie Jay
Barratt/AMA/Getty Images A Newcastle fan draped in a Saudi Arabia flag in October 2021. Photograph: Robbie Jay

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