BusinessMirror

Asian Cup opens with Gulf political issues

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ABU DHABI, United Arab Emirates—Asian Cup host United Arab Emirates (UAE) needed a late penalty from a handball to salvage a 1-1 draw with Bahrain on Saturday in the opening match of a tournament taking place against the backdrop of a regional diplomatic crisis.

Bahrain was close to snatching a win after Mohamed Al Rohaimi scored from the center of the area in the 78th minute. But Mohamed Marhoon handled the ball in the box, sending Ahmed Khalil to the spot to snatch the equalizer with two minutes remaining. UAE and Bahrain share Group A with India and Thailand.

The Asian Cup has expanded to 24 teams from 16 in 2015 when Australia won the title on home soil. The holder open its defense on Sunday when it plays Jordan in Group B.

Qatar is among the 24 finalists while the country is being boycotted diplomatic­ally and economical­ly by regional rivals, including the UAE and Saudi Arabia. That has led to air links to Doha being severed by the UAE, impacting players, officials and media.

The chairman of the Asian Cup organizing committee is Qatari, and Saoud al-Mohannadi’s entry to the UAE was delayed this week, bringing the Asian Football Confederat­ion (AFC) deeper into the Persian Gulf political standoff.

The AFC said it received reports from Qatar that al-Mohannadi was unable to travel to the UAE from Muscat in Oman, despite having been “assured of visas and entry permits for all AFC organizing committee and executive members.”The AFC said on Friday that al-Mohannadi, who is also a vice president of the

football confederat­ion, was in Abu Dhabi.

Qatar’s Sports Press Committee said on Friday a five-member media delegation was banned from entering the UAE despite having entry visas. The AFC, which previously said journalist­s would be subject to a “security check” by UAE authoritie­s, said it assured the Qatari journalist­s they would be allowed in to cover the tournament.

“We are in contact with the LOC [local organizing committee] as these journalist­s had been approved by the authoritie­s,” the AFC said on Saturday.

Anyone watching the tournament in the UAE has to watch a feed from Qatar state-owned broadcaste­r BeIN Sports, which is the host broadcaste­r and holds the exclusive regional rights. But traveling media reported their official tournament hotel did not carry BeIN, which was blocked for a time in the UAE in 2017 at the start of the boycott of Qatar.

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