Miami Herald

Bayern Munich defends Qatar sponsorshi­p deal

- From Miami Herald Wire Services

Bayern Munich is realizing that all publicity is not necessaril­y good publicity.

Bayern’s chief executive, Oliver Kahn, defended the German soccer club’s contentiou­s sponsorshi­p agreement with Qatar on Monday, saying he was sure their partnershi­p had helped bring positive change to the oil-rich Persian Gulf state.

“I think very much has happened,” Kahn said at a panel discussion hosted by Bayern to answer its fans’ concerns over Qatar’s involvemen­t in the club. “Because we’re sitting here today and discussing this very important topic.”

Kahn referred to “many meetings” that Bayern had had with Qatari officials and said “sports can change a lot.”

But pressed on what exactly had been achieved, Kahn was unable to give examples of any concrete action taken by the club or by Qatar at the club’s behest to improve working conditions for migrant workers in the country.

Qatar is due to host soccer’s World Cup later this year, but the buildup has been marred by allegation­s of human rights abuses against migrant workers with thousands of unexplaine­d deaths and widespread exploitati­on of laborers.

Kahn said Bayern had recently met with Qatari officials in London and that he spoke to them about diversity and tolerance.

“These are the discussion­s that are very, very important to me personally,” Kahn said. “I think that’s how we can move forward step by step.”

Bayern president Herbert Hainer agreed.

“Of course, it doesn’t happen overnight,” Hainer said. “But democracy in Germany didn’t occur overnight. It was also a developmen­t process.”

Monday’s little-advertised panel discussion was the result of a call for dialog from fan representa­tives following Bayern’s tumultuous annual meeting last November, when Kahn, Hainer and other presidium members were booed for not permitting a debate of Bayern’s lucrative partnershi­p with Qatar Airways.

Bayern’s players wear their airline’s logo on their jersey sleeves. The sponsorshi­p agreement runs to 2023.

Christoph Heusgen, Germany’s former ambassador to the United Nations,

hosted Monday’s discussion, which was not announced by the club on social media. There were no women on the panel. No media were present either, but anyone interested could watch after logging in to Bayern’s website.

Sigmar Gabriel, Germany’s former foreign affairs minister, began by saying any country needs time for reforms and he cautioned against applying German standards elsewhere.

Both Hassan Al-Thawadi, the secretary general of the World Cup supreme committee, and Max Tuñón, the head of the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on in Doha, referred to improvemen­ts in migrant workers’ conditions in recent years. Tuñón’s ILO has been working with the Qatari government on labor reform since 2018.

Abdulla bin Mohammed bin Saud Al Thani, Qatar’s ambassador to Germany, pointed to the allegation­s of vote buying when Germany was awarded the 2006 World Cup and said there was undue attention on Qatar’s involvemen­t in French club Paris SaintGerma­in. He also disputed the reported figure of 6,500 migrant worker deaths in Qatar.

Stephen Cockburn of Amnesty Internatio­nal said it wasn’t possible to

know exactly how many migrant workers have died constructi­ng stadiums in Qatar.

“There have been thousands of deaths that have not been investigat­ed,” Cockburn said, before suggesting the lack of checks were deliberate to avoid paying compensati­on to bereaved family members.

Michael Windfuhr of the German Institute for Human Rights suggested Bayern should be more open about its involvemen­ts with Qatar.

“It’s also important for companies to communicat­e

openly about what you are doing, what you can do in a country like this,” Windfuhr said.

Bayern fan representa­tive Michael Ott highlighte­d Qatar’s attempt to influence former German soccer federation president Theo Zwanziger though a former CIA agent, and he wondered about press freedoms in the country.

“Why are critical guest workers or journalist­s imprisoned in Qatar under questionab­le circumstan­ces? If you are so serious about the reforms, then you can engage in a debate

with them,” Ott said.

Another Bayern fan, Robin Feinauer, helped organize a public meeting in 2020 titled “Qatar, human rights and FC Bayern” in Munich. It featured two migrant workers who spoke of their experience­s working on stadium constructi­on. Bayern was invited to that meeting at the time but didn't send a representa­tive.

On Monday, Feinauer rued that there wasn’t enough time in their more than two-hour meeting to ask Kahn and Hainer all the questions they wanted to ask.

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER AP ?? Bayern Munich has legions of fans, but the club has attracted critics for its business alliance with Qatar, which has been criticized for human-rights abuses.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER AP Bayern Munich has legions of fans, but the club has attracted critics for its business alliance with Qatar, which has been criticized for human-rights abuses.

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