Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Twitter promotes anonymous attacks on 2022 Qatar World Cup

- By Rob Harris

LONDON » The unsolicite­d tweets started appearing on timelines over the last week. No website, company or individual is publicly associated with the accounts. But the message Twitter is being paid to promote and spread is clear: Qatar is an unsuitable host of the 2022 World Cup.

Twitter is cashing in from anonymous attacks on Qatar just as it faces scrutiny over the limited disclosure of informatio­n about political advertisin­g in the 2016 U.S. election. Twitter leaders are testifying this week before congressio­nal investigat­ions looking into how social media networks provided a platform for Russian meddling.

The online assaults on Qatar promote the talking points amplified by the four Arab nations who in June cut ties with the first Middle East host of the World Cup. Bahrain, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates all cut diplomatic ties and began a boycott of Qatar on June 5 over allegation­s that Doha supports extremists and has overly warm ties to Iran.

But the Twitter users who received the posts accusing Qatar of supporting extremism alongside images of World Cup preparatio­ns are offered no indication of the authors.

A promoted post from the QatarExpos­ed account asks: “Why does the richest country in the world support terrorism?”

An accompanyi­ng video shows images from the soccer game between France and Germany in Paris in November 2015 that was targeted by suicide bombers as the narrator states: “Financing and promoting extremism has become state policy.” The sequence continues with footage of Qatar winning the FIFA vote in 2010. The video concludes saying: “Its sovereign neighbors have taken a stand, they won’t back down.”

A second account being promoted on Twitter, KickQatarO­ut, features similar branding — with the same typeface and header graphic — and also posted its first message on Oct. 20. With an illustrati­on of a hand showing a red card, the account advocates calls for FIFA to strip Qatar of the World Cup and highlights concerns about conditions for migrant workers.

A promoted tweet claims there are “projection­s of 4,000 dead workers,” as Qatar hosts the World Cup.

“This is naked and embarrassi­ng corruption,” another KickQatarO­ut tweet states, “it will destroy internatio­nal football, for the sake of one country.”

The Qatar World Cup organizing committee declined to comment on the promoted tweets from accounts. The natural gasrich nation has long denied funding extremists.

The anti-Qatar Twitter accounts mirror the tone of other material put out by the Saudi American Public Relation Affairs Committee, a Washington-based influence firm run by Saudi citizen Salman al-Ansari. The committee, known as SAPRAC, has a $1.2 million contract with Bahrain to produce videos and material about “adversary countries in the Middle East,” according to filings with the U.S. Justice Department.

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