The Star Malaysia - Star2

Hotel shortage in Qatar for World Cup

- By ROB HARRIS

QATAR wants to attract 1.2 million people to the World Cup 2022 but will struggle to accommodat­e many of them.

With ticket sales beginning this month, supporters are in for a shock when they look for somewhere to stay: Qatar already looks sold out.

Extensive searches by The Associated Press of leading hotel chains and aggregatio­n websites found only one property with availabili­ty for the entire tournament which runs from Nov 21 to Dec 18, 2022.

Most rooms have already been block-booked by World Cup organisers, in part to prevent price gouging, but mainly to ensure availabili­ty for teams, FIFA officials, sponsors and media.

“If a team is qualified, it’s now that people are trying to find accommodat­ion,” said Ronan Evain, executive director of the Football Supporters Europe group.

“And at the moment there is nothing.”

Qatar’s Supreme Committee, which in charge of World Cup planning, has provided the first details to the AP acknowledg­ing the accommodat­ion challenges after weeks of questions.

Only approximat­ely 90,000

rooms will be made available to the public via a website. That is around the same number of fans from the United States who had tickets for the 2018 World Cup which was spread across Russia

and had hotels available on the open market.

Yet the AP has been told that surveys and data modelling by Qatari officials based on travel to previous World Cups show they now anticipate 850,000 overseas visitors will require rooms. World Cup organisers have also said more than 1.2 million visitors will come. The most recent data from the Qatar Tourism Authority said there are 33,208 rooms in hotels and hotel apartments.

What Qatar boasts as being its key selling point – the most compact World Cup ever with the eight stadiums within a 50km radius of Doha – could prove the barrier to visitors going or being able to make lengthy trips.

“It becomes a bit of a dystopian World Cup if the stadium could be anywhere in the world ... in the middle of the desert and then you just fly in and out,” Evain said. “That’s certainly not the experience of the majority of fans are looking for.”

Despite the pressures on hotel stock in Qatar, there will be no system in place to equitably split the rooms between fans of participat­ing nations or prevent them being bought up for the entire tournament en masse.

“There will be no ballot,” the Supreme Committee said. “Visitors will be able to book on the accommodat­ion portal on a first-come, first-served basis.”

Longer stays

Further restrictin­g the availabili­ty, Qatar will not allow one -night stays for fans to make short trips and free up rooms for others. No prices have been disclosed.

“As is standard practice in many events around the world minimum and maximum lengths of stay will be applied,” the Supreme Committee said.

“This will be a minimum of two nights for the group stages – the same as in Russia. Long-stay bookings will be possible, and even more so for visitors keen to stay for the entire tournament.”

There will be 4,000 cabins on cruise ships that will dock in Doha for the tournament. While camping in the desert had previously been touted as a means of finding space for fans, that is now being downplayed as a significan­t option.

“The campsite availabili­ty will make up a small percentage of the overall accommodat­ion options in Qatar,” the Supreme Committee said. “We have always viewed the

ability to camp as an offering of traditiona­l Qatari hospitalit­y, not as a solution to speculatio­n around accommodat­ion shortages.”

Flying in and out of the country for each match could prove to be the only viable option for many fans.

“We might end up in a situation where, at least for the European, and some of the Asian teams, the best option for fans will be to travel in and out on match day, which would come with a cost,” Evain said.

“But also it would come with quite an extraordin­ary environmen­tal footprint.”

Direct return flights from London and Paris for next November and December currently exceed US$1,000 (RM4,180); from New York it’s more than double that price and from Sao Paulo (Brazil) even higher.

Pay more

“If the focus remains on premium accommodat­ion and if the flight prices remain where they are,” Evain said, “then there will be people that will just not be able to afford travelling to Qatar.

“We know that FIFA operates on the basis that there is this fantastic fan base somewhere in the world that is ready to pay a fortune to follow the World Cup. But previous tournament­s don’t show that. There are games at every tournament that are not sold out.”

The group stage features 32 teams with games across 12 days when Qatar anticipate­s 559,000 flying in with a peak of 276,000 ticket holders around Nov 27 and 28 requiring an estimated 128,000 rooms – more than the country’s entire hotel stock for fans.

Just taking Nov 27, after searching leading travel portals, only three hotels could be booked on the open market on the Internet. The cheapest available rooms there would cost US$1,028 (RM), US$1,431 (RM) or US$5,276 (RM) for the night.

The Supreme Committee pointed out that Moscow and St Petersburg did not sell out the hotels reserved by organisers, but those are cities larger than Qatar with far more rooms.

“No one is seriously arguing that Qatar should build a million hotel rooms,” Evain said. “There is probably some sort of middle ground and solution, temporary housing or anything like this, but for the moment it’s hard to see this happening.”

When trying to book for the entire tournament on travel portals, the only room the AP could find on the open market was a US$1,056 (RM ) a night at a fourstar hotel near to the airport through Agoda.

The Accor, Hilton, IHG, Marriott and Wyndham chains, which run most of the leading hotel brands, are all showing no rooms available during the World Cup at their 28 properties in and around Doha – the only built-up areas in the oiland-gas rich desert nation.

The lifting of the economic, diplomatic and travel boycott of Doha by Gulf rivals does open up the possibilit­y of fans commuting from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia or Dubai, which are both about a 90-minute flight from Qatar’s single airport.

“They are countries with an even worse human rights record than Qatar,” Evain said.

Some fans will also be put off by the Gulf nations’ ANTI-LGBTQ+ laws. Even opting to go to Qatar at all could present fans with a moral quandary given the well-documented poor working conditions and human rights violations which have only been partially addressed with changes to labour laws after scrutiny of the abuses and deaths of the low-paid, largely migrant worker population building facilities for the World Cup, including hotels.

“It’s a dilemma every fan will have to deal with,” Evain said. – AP

 ?? — AFP ?? The Lusail stadium in doha will host the FIFA World Cup final in december 2022. almost a million visitors are estimated to be in the kingdom for the World Cup, and Qatar does not have enough hotel rooms for everyone.
— AFP The Lusail stadium in doha will host the FIFA World Cup final in december 2022. almost a million visitors are estimated to be in the kingdom for the World Cup, and Qatar does not have enough hotel rooms for everyone.

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