Daily Dispatch

After criticism, smooth World Cup seen as crucial to Qatar

Tiny and conservati­ve Muslim country, preparing for kick-off on Sunday, set to host more than a million fans

-

After a bumpy road to the World Cup marked by criticism of its human rights record, Qatar has much riding on the tournament passing off smoothly if it is to be remembered as a success and helps affirm Doha’s place on the global stage.

The controvers­y that has long surrounded the decision to award Qatar the World Cup has built to a crescendo, with unrelentin­g scrutiny of its treatment of migrant workers and the LGBT+ community prompting the Qatari Emir to accuse detractors of double standards and fabricatio­ns.

As Qatar prepares for kick-off on Sunday, the measure of success will be pulling off a tournament enjoyed by fans that concludes without major incident, allowing Doha to switch attention away from the criticism, analysts say.

The stakes are high for a tiny Gulf state with a national population so small — Qataris number about 350,000 — that they could fit into the eight new stadiums built for the occasion.

For Qatar, which has survived as an independen­t state since 1971 in an often hostile neighbourh­ood, hosting the World Cup is part of a wider strategy of playing an outsized role in global affairs.

A major gas exporter, it hosts US troops, mediates in conflicts, and finances the influentia­l Al Jazeera news network.

“There has been so much negative coverage focusing on labour rights and human rights.

“The running of the World Cup is the only opportunit­y that Qatar sees for redemption,” said Marc Owen Jones, an associate professor at Hamad Bin Khalifa University.

“The markers of a successful World Cup would be as a nation-branding exercise, to position Qatar as an important sports hub in the Middle East and the wider Arab world,” he said.

“In the soft power level, it will demonstrat­e that Qatar is a global and multilater­al player.”

The first Middle Eastern country to host the World Cup, Qatar hailed it as a regional milestone when it was awarded the tournament in 2010.

But Qatari officials have appeared increasing­ly vexed by what they see as unfair criticisms, including boycott calls.

The foreign minister has said people calling for such a move are from a handful of countries — 10 at most — that do not represent the rest of the world which is looking forward to the tournament.

“The reasons given for boycotting the World Cup do not add up.

“There is a lot of hypocrisy in these attacks, which ignore all that we have achieved,” Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahma­n AlThani told French newspaper Le Monde.

A number of teams participat­ing in the tournament are seeking to bring attention to the issues for which Qatar has faced criticism, including LGBT+ rights in the country where homosexual­ity is illegal.

The US squad are showing their support for the LGBT+ community by way of a rainbow themed team logo inside their training facility, and shirts worn by the Netherland­s team will be auctioned to support migrant workers in Qatar.

The football associatio­ns of 10 European countries, including England and Germany, have pushed Fifa to take action to improve the rights of migrant workers in Qatar.

But striking a different tone, Fifa has urged teams to focus on the soccer in Qatar, and not let the sport be dragged into ideologica­l or political “battles ”— a call supported by Brazil.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he is sure it will be a success.

Pressing back against the criticism, Qatar points to labour reforms aimed at protecting migrant workers from exploitati­on and says the system is a work in progress.

Organisers have repeatedly said everyone is welcome no matter their sexual orientatio­n or background.

But they also warned against certain behaviour in the conservati­ve Muslim country, where public drunkennes­s can incur a prison sentence of up to six months and displays of affection can be grounds for arrest.

With more than a million fans expected to visit, the event is a huge logistical challenge.

The US ambassador has urged Qatar’s police and authoritie­s to be patient, tolerant and transparen­t in managing them.

The US Embassy and others have told fans they could face punishment for behaviour that would be tolerated elsewhere.

Fans will be allowed to buy beer at matches. Organisers have said anyone who overdoes it will be “looked after”.

“The success story of Qatar has been walking the fine line between internatio­nal criticism and domestic criticism, between holding on to local culture and opening up to the outside world,” said Zarqa Parvez Abdullah, an adjunct assistant professor at Georgetown University in Qatar.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa