Daily Mail

AJ sponsors back Saudi fight

- By DANIEL MATTHEWS

ANTHONY JOSHUA’S controvers­ial decision to fight in saudi arabia will not affect the £ 8.3million he earns from sponsorshi­p and endorsemen­ts.

Joshua faces andy ruiz Jnr in Diriyah in December as he looks to win back the world heavyweigh­t titles he lost in a surprise defeat in June. saudi arabia has come under criticism for its human rights record, with amnesty internatio­nal claiming the fight is ‘likely to be yet another opportunit­y for the saudi authoritie­s to try to “sportswash” their severely tarnished image’. they say Joshua should speak out about human rights in the country but promoter eddie Hearn insisted ‘political questions are above my head’.

Joshua is one of Britain’s most marketable athletes, with firms including British airways, Jaguar Land rover, Lucozade and under armour associated with the 29-year-old.

When Sportsmail gave his major partners the opportunit­y to comment on the fight, only three responded — and none suggested their deals would be affected by his decision.

Land rover stated they were proud of their associatio­n with global ambassador Joshua.

‘Our partnershi­p stems from a passion for sport and comes with no political motives or political agenda,’ they said.

a spokespers­on for Lucozade, whose parent company suntory Beverage & Food europe claim to be committed to ‘safeguardi­ng human rights within our business and supply chain’, said: ‘We’re proud that with anthony Joshua and other sporting icons, we’ve inspired over 1.5m people to exercise and we will continue — through this partnershi­p and beyond — to encourage people.’

StubHub responded by merely outlining they are the ‘official ticket distributi­on channel’ for Matchroom, its uk fighters, and AJ’s British fights.

Other big businesses, including Hugo Boss and Beats By Dre, failed to reply. Last year the chief executive of apple, Beats By Dre’s parent company, was awarded the Human rights award in alabama, while Hugo Boss insist they are ‘thoroughly committed to upholding human rights and complying with labour standards in all areas of our business activities’.

amnesty internatio­nal uk’s head of campaigns Felix Jakens said: ‘ Despite long- overdue reforms on women’s rights, saudi arabia is in the grip of a sweeping human rights crackdown, with women’s rights activists, lawyers and members of the shia minority community all being targeted.’

 ?? KEVIN QUIGLEY ?? Controvers­y: Joshua
KEVIN QUIGLEY Controvers­y: Joshua

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