The Pak Banker

Red-carding Qatar

- Mahir Ali that pervades the post-colonial Western order.

Ican claim with a fair degree of confidence that I won't be wasting my time on any of the FIFA World Cup football matches in Qatar. The boycott isn't related to the venue - it stems from a broader lack of interest in "the beautiful game".

I've long struggled to understand why a bunch of men kicking a round object around a playing field should inspire such passion and even fanaticism. Local pride in sporting accomplish­ments is one thing, but English, Spanish and Italian clubs (among others) now boast devotees thousands of miles away.

When English team members arriving in Doha were mobbed by Indian fans, much of the British press corps initially assumed the cheer squad had been sponsored by the Qatari authoritie­s. But the enthusiasm turned out to be genuine in this case.

Qatar faced a flurry of free kicks, mostly from Western institutio­ns, in the run-up to huge property investors.

Sunday's opening ceremony. Remarkably, the Qatar is estimated to be the tenth largest BBC decided to devote its coverage to probing landlord in Britain. Its properties extend from questions about labour and LGBTQI-plus iconic London hotels such as Claridge's, rights in the Gulf emirate, relegating the inaugural Connaughts and the InterConti­nental Park Lane spectacle to a streaming service. to landmark stores such as Harrods, and much

There are essentiall­y two things to be said more besides - including part-ownership of that about the criticism that Qatar has faced. Much skyline blight known as the Shard. Any number of it is valid: labour conditions are a travesty of British politician­s and members of the royal throughout the Arabian peninsula; homophobia, family, including the new king, are beholden to sometimes entrenched in law, is common Qatari largesse. pretty much across the Muslim world; and It's not just Qatar, of course. If anything, institutio­nalised misogyny is not exclusivel­y a the UAE and Saudi Arabia are even more adept Gulf phenomenon, although most other practition­ers at buying access to the highest echelons of don't formally descend to the level of Western power. The 2010 deal to seal the host legislated "guardiansh­ip" whereby women are of the 2022 World Cup may effectivel­y have practicall­y considered male property. been finalised at Elysée Palace under the auspices

At the same time, it would be absurd not to of Nicolas Sarkozy. acknowledg­e that much of the wrath directed at It is also impossible to ignore the fact that Qatar rests on multiple layers of hypocrisy. it has been 12 years since the World Cup was

From certain points of view, there are awarded to a tiny nation with little in the way of absolutely no problems with Qatar and its alThani footballin­g history and even less sports infrastruc­ture. potentates as suppliers of natural gas, Almost all of the stadiums hosting the procurers of Western military hardware, or fixtures have been built from scratch since then.

Qatar has reportedly spent $200 billion on hosting the tournament.

It's predecesso­r host for 2018 was also announced in 2010 - and Russia was presumably grateful that much of the subsequent attention was focused on Qatar. The Russian attitude towards sexual orientatio­n more or less mirrors that of the Gulf states, but it didn't figure much in headlines. Certain other Eastern European states, Nato and EU members, are equally hostile to homosexual­ity, as are substantia­l elements of the Republican right wing in the US.

Beyond that, though, how is it okay to blithely welcome Qatari investment­s and sell Doha the latest weaponry, yet to denounce it as an outlier when it stages a football tournament? 'Sports washing' isn't by any means a Qatari invention - the Saudis are particular­ly adept at it, not least in the golf zone.

They will also host a Winter Oly mpics, and a future FIFA World Cup is hardly out of the question. A much more problemati­c individual than any of the Qatari emirs will likely be Saudi king by then.

In the case of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi's murder and slicing-up by official Saudi agents, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has predictabl­y been singled out for sovereign immunity by the US.

Qatar can justifiabl­y be accused of other human rights violations, but has never attempted anything so egregious. Qatar was once essentiall­y a Saudi proxy. It eventually moved on, aimed for an independen­t foreign policy, and sought to establish itself as a Middle Eastern mediator, with some success.

It also hosts a crucial US military base, which helped to avert a Saudi-Emirati invasion in 2017, when it was cast out of the Gulf brotherhoo­d.

Things have changed since last year; MBS witnessed Qatar becoming the first host nation to lose an opening match. Mind you, previous hosts have included Mussolini-ruled Italy (and Argentina under one of Latin America's most brutal military juntas. Qatar isn't so much an outlier as a symptom of the capitalist corruption

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