Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Saudi Arabia cancels beIN Sports licence

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DUBAI. — Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Competitio­n (GAC) said on Tuesday it had permanentl­y cancelled the licence of Qatari broadcaste­r beIN Sports, which has been barred from broadcasti­ng in the kingdom since mid-2017 due to a dispute with Qatar.

GAC said in a statement it was also fining beIN Sports 10 million riyals ($2,7 million) for what it said were “monopolist­ic practices”, a charge the broadcaste­r denied.

beIN holds regional broadcasti­ng rights for several major global sporting events and entertainm­ent shows, including England’s Premier League soccer. The Saudi sovereign wealth fund is seeking to buy Premier League club Newcastle United.

The broadcaste­r was initially blocked in Saudi Arabia under a boycott imposed when Riyadh and its allies severed diplomatic and trade ties with Qatar in June 2017 over Doha’s alleged support of terrorism, a charge Qatar denies.

GAC said it found beIN Sports had “abused its dominant position through several monopolist­ic practices” related to what it described as an exclusive sports broadcast bundle for the 2016 UEFA European Championsh­ip soccer matches.

“The decision is nonsensica­l on every single level, banning beIN for packaging its rights in the standard way that sports and entertainm­ent broadcaste­rs all around the world do, and indeed as other broadcaste­rs active in the Saudi market also do,” a beIN Media Group spokespers­on said in a statement.

In 2018, Qatar filed a complaint with the World Trade Organisati­on (WTO), saying Saudi Arabia was blocking beIN from broadcasti­ng in the kingdom and said it had refused to take effective action against alleged piracy of beIN’s content by beoutQ, a commercial-scale pirating operation.

A WTO panel last month found Saudi Arabia had breached global rules on intellectu­al property rights by failing to prosecute beoutQ, while supporting Riyadh’s view that it could block the Qatari broadcaste­r from obtaining legal counsel in the kingdom on grounds of national security.

The beIN spokespers­on said GAC’s decision was the result of legal proceeding­s that “repeatedly violated beIN’s due process rights”.

BeoutQ is widely available in Saudi Arabia but Riyadh has repeatedly said it is not based there, and that the Saudi government is committed to protecting intellectu­al property. Reuters could not determine who owns or operates beoutQ. —Reuters.

 ??  ?? General view of a beIN Sports microphone before the match
General view of a beIN Sports microphone before the match

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