Super-rich
Qatar fulfilled Blatter aspiration of an Asia country hosting the World Cup, but allegations of bribery have dogged the 2018 award from the beginning.
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"It will blow over" tends to be Qatar's unofficial
response to criticism of its World Cup bid, but with a FIFA corruption scandal
exploding onto the world's front pages, the Gulf state has glumly realised it
may have a real fight on its hands.
Super-rich Qatar would
suffer no economic pain if it lost the right to host the world's top soccer
event. At stake is influence, including its use of sport as a platform to
operate on the global stage, opening doors to finance, media, diplomacy,
property and tourism.
Years of allegations of
corruption in the vote that won it the 2022 cup, and of abuse of migrant
workers, mean Qatar has struggled to convince world opinion of the justness of
its cause.
Reuters report continues:
Now Qatar must work even
harder to protect its brand after U.S. prosecutors charged nine international
soccer officials with corruption and Swiss authorities announced their own
investigation into the award of the 2018 and 2022 tournaments.
In Doha there is
resentment at the prospect of having to spend the next seven years fending off
allegations of sleaze, and a feeling the country is being made a scapegoat.
Anti-Arab Bias?
Some suspect anti-Arab
bias. Others blame countries sore at losing hosting rights to Qatar.
"The attack on
Qatar's World Cup is racist," foreign minister Khaled al-Attiyah was
quoted as saying on the Twitter account of the editor in chief of Qatar's
pro-government newspaper, al-Sharq.
"Hosting the
tournament is not only in our interest but in the interest of all Arabs."
Former prime minister
Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani told America's Fox News on Sunday that
attention was on Qatar rather than Russia, which hosts the 2018 cup.
"Is it because it's
an Arab, Islamic, small country? That's the feeling of the people in the
region," he said, adding Qatar won the rights fairly and cleanly. The
charges, he said, came from countries that had lost the cup.
Qatar beat Australia,
Japan, the United States and South Korea. The decision to stage the tournament
in country where daytime summer temperatures rarely fall below 40 Celsius
(104°F) startled many in global sport.
Also critical were rights
groups highlighting harsh working conditions in Qatar's construction sector.
In private, Qatari
officials sound resigned, but resilient.
Qatar manages criticism daily,
said a senior Gulf source who declined to be named. "It comes with the
territory, we're under attack all the time. It doesn't faze us."
Sports Diplomacy
Qatar's sports diplomacy
has been persistent. Year after year, Qatar denied wrongdoing in its 2022 bid,
while also pursuing global influence, including in sports.
It owns France's Paris
Saint-Germain club, sponsors top European clubs, acquired football television
rights for its Al Jazeera Sport channel, hosts of a slew of international
sports events and runs a football training network in poor countries.
But the latest crisis
raises the stakes, even if the business impact of a loss of the cup would be
limited. More serious is the potential impact on the country's image.
Ben Sturner, chief
executive of U.S. sports marketing company Lever Agency, said it would be
"tough" for Qatar to restore that image. Qatar must be transparent
about its dealings involving the cup, he said.
Pressure on Qatar
increased in 2013 when Britain's Guardian newspaper said dozens of Nepalis had
died while working on World Cup related projects. Qatari and Nepali officials
denied the report.
In 2014 Britain's Sunday
Times newspaper alleged Qatari former FIFA executive committee member Mohamed
Bin Hammam had lobbied on behalf of his country for the 2022 rights, paying
millions in cash, gifts and junkets, especially to African officials.
Qatar says said Bin
Hammam played no official or unofficial role in Qatar's 2022 bid committee.
Simple Denials
On Friday, Qatar's
organising committee said it had made its bid with integrity but would comply
with further investigations.
Analysts say simple
denials are not a viable strategy.
"It's not good
enough," said James Dorsey, a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies in Singapore. "They have never given chapter and
verse of what their dealings were with Bin Hammam."
Dorsey said the Qataris
"never expected this, which was naive. And when it started they basically
felt they couldn't win, so they figured they would let it would blow over,
despite being warned it won't blow over."
Theodore Karasik, a
UAE-based geopolitical analyst, said Qatar and its advisers "should have
been preparing for this day for a long while now. All indicators showed that
the FIFA scandal would not exempt Doha."
Qatar's reputation as a
regional political mediator could be harmed, analysts and diplomats say, but
legal terms between FIFA and Qatar mean there is little chance of it losing the
cup.
They note that Qatar in
2014 approved better treatment of migrant workers, making firms set up bank
accounts for workers, pay wages electronically and stop midday outdoor work in
the summer heat.
Some Qataris would not
miss the tournament if it went.
"I will be the first
to celebrate if the cup gets taken away from us," said one executive.
"It's only brought us traffic and headaches from the international
media."
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