Business Standard

Teams shelve armband plan seen as snub to host

- Doha, 21 November

Fifa’s threat of on-field punishment for players forced World Cup teams to back down Monday and abandon a plan for their captains to wear armbands that were seen as a rebuke to host nation Qatar’s human rights record.

Just hours before the first players wearing the armbands in support of the “One Love” campaign were set to take the field, Fifa warned they would be immediatel­y be shown yellow cards — changing the calculus for the seven European teams, which may have expected to merely be fined. The displays are a violation of Fifa rules.

The standoff was just the latest dispute that threatened to overshadow the play. Since being awarded the World Cup hosting rights in 2010, conservati­ve Muslim Qatar has faced criticism of its treatment of low-paid migrant workers and criminalis­ation of homosexual­ity.

The decision came three days after beer sales at stadiums were suddenly banned under pressure from the Qatari government and two days after Fifa President Gianni Infantino delivered an extraordin­ary tirade defending the host nation’s rights record.

The captains of seven European nations had vowed to wear armbands carrying the heart-shaped multi-coloured logo of the “One Love” campaign, which promotes inclusion and diversity in soccer and society. That set up the prospect of viewers worldwide seeing a symbol of disapprova­l with the host country and defiance of Fifa on the arms of England’s Harry Kane, the Netherland­s’ Virgil van Dijk and Wales’ Gareth Bale on Monday.

But in the end, the teams said they couldn’t sacrifice success on the field. A yellow card is a warning, but two yellows would see a player sent off the field for the rest of the game and banned from the next — a sanction that is intensifie­d in the World Cup format, where teams play just three games before the eliminatio­n rounds begin.

 ?? ?? Iranian players pose before the start of their match against England. They lost 4-1, but the team’s refusal to sing the anthem was widely seen as supporting the anti-government protests in Iran
Iranian players pose before the start of their match against England. They lost 4-1, but the team’s refusal to sing the anthem was widely seen as supporting the anti-government protests in Iran

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