Global Times

Organizers under fire over rainbow symbols stance

- AFP

World Cup organizers are facing growing questions about whether the rainbow logo can be displayed at the World Cup in Qatar, where homosexual­ity is illegal.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino said in his opening press conference “I feel gay” and that “everyone is welcome” at the first World Cup to be held in the Arab world.

Seven European teams including England and Germany announced earlier this week that they were abandoning plans made months ago for their captains to wear a rainbow-themed armband.

In a joint statement, the teams said they had backed down because “FIFA has been very clear that it will impose sporting sanctions.” In other words, it would direct referees to show their players a yellow card or even send them off the field of play.

BBC TV presenter Alex Scott wore the armband anyway as she introduced coverage of the match from the pitch.

Germany’s football associatio­n DFB said it was examining if FIFA’s threat to punish players who wear the “OneLove” armband was legal.

“FIFA banned us from showing a sign for diversity and human rights. They combined this with massive threats of sports sanctions without specifying what these would be,” DFB spokespers­on Steffen Simon told reporters.

“The DFB is checking if this action by FIFA is legal.”

The sensitivit­y about the issue is not limited to the players at the Qatar World Cup. At stadiums, security staff have ordered spectators to remove items of clothing featuring the rainbow logo.

Laura McAllister, a former captain of Wales’ women’s team, was confronted by security guards at her country’s match against the US on Monday and ordered to remove her rainbow-colored bucket hat.

The rainbow version of Welsh football fans’ apparel shows support for the

LGBTQ community.

“I pointed out that FIFA had made lots of comments about supporting LGBT rights in this tournament, and said to them that coming from a nation where we’re very passionate about equality for all people, I wasn’t going to take my hat off,” McAllister told Britain’s ITV.

“They were insistent that unless I took the hat off we weren’t actually allowed to come into the stadium.”

The Welsh Football Associatio­n (WFA) said several members of Rainbow Wall, Wales LGBTQ supporters’ group, had also been told they could not wear the hats.

The WFA said it was “extremely disappoint­ed” and would take up the issue with FIFA.

At the same match, American journalist Grant Wahl tweeted that he had been told he must remove his T-shirt because it featured a rainbow logo. He said he was detained for 25 minutes but was eventually allowed to enter the stadium.

 ?? Photo: IC ?? Former Danish prime minister Helle ThorningSc­hmidt wears rainbow-colored sleeves on her outfit during the World Cup match between Denmark and Tunisia in Al-Rayyan, west of Doha, Qatar on November 22, 2022.
Photo: IC Former Danish prime minister Helle ThorningSc­hmidt wears rainbow-colored sleeves on her outfit during the World Cup match between Denmark and Tunisia in Al-Rayyan, west of Doha, Qatar on November 22, 2022.

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