Lurking in the background of world soccer body FUT 15 Coins's
talks with Qatar Airways to replace its Dubai rival Emirates as a
sponsor is the escalating hostility between Qatar and the United Arab
Emirates as a result of their divergent attitudes towards political
Islam.
Officially, Emirates' decision to end its $200 million
relationship with FIFA is a result of its announcement three years ago
that the airline is restructuring its sponsorships, which also include
soccer clubs Arsenal, Real Madrid, Paris Saint Germaine (PSG) and
Hamburger SV.
The announcement came a year after Emirates emerged
as the most vocal of the soccer body's sponsors in expressing concern
about FIFA's mushrooming corruption scandals involving disgraced FIFA
executive committee member and then Asian Football Confederation (AFC)
president Mohammed Bin Hammam, a Qatari national, and question marks
about the integrity of the successful Russian and Qatari bids to host
the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
Emirates said at the time that it
was "disappointed." Emirates was however uncharacteristically silent
when in the last year various sponsors expressed concern about the
negative publicity FIFA was generating as a result of mass protests in
Brazil in the run-up to this year's World Cup and the soccer body's
unresolved transparency and accountability issues. In a statement, the
airline said it was parting ways with FIFA because the soccer body's
proposed contract extending the sponsorship arrangement had not met its
expectations.
FIFA's tarnished image is without doubt a major
reason why Emirates alongside Sony is seeking to disassociate itself
from the soccer body. Yet, it is hard to disassociate state-owned
Emirates' decision from the UAE's deteriorating relations with Qatar
that has led to the incarceration in the UAE of Qatari nationals on
charges of spying, an environment in which Emiratis are more reluctant
to visit Qatar, and UAE's investment of millions of dollars in efforts
to undermine its Gulf rival's image and credibility.
In that
environment, Emirates is unlikely to want to have appeared as a sponsor
when Qatar hosts the World Cup in eight years' time. A litmus test for
what Emirates' motives are will be whether Emirates also alters its
relationship with PSG, which is owned by Qatar. Emirati officials insist
that their country's economic and commercial decisions are not effected
by political disputes with partners.
In a statement on its
website, Emirates reiterated that "soccer is a truly global sport and
consequently has always been an important strand in Emirates'
sponsorship portfolio ... Emirates' sponsorship of FIFA is central to
its soccer strategy, facilitating connection with football fans across
the world."
The rift between the UAE and Qatar runs deep. The UAE
alongside Saudi Arabia and Bahrain withdrew its ambassador from Doha in
March in a so far failed effort to force Qatar to halt its support for
the Muslim Brotherhood. That failure appears to have prompted the UAE to
step up pressure on Qatar as part of its more activist foreign policy
aimed at countering political Islam
In July, the UAE backed the
establishment of the Muslim Council of Elders (MCE) in a bid to counter
Sheikh Qaradawi's International Union of Muslim Scholars as well as
Qatar's support for political change in the Middle East and North Africa
as long as it does not include the Gulf. The MCE promotes a Sunni
Muslim tradition of obedience to the ruler rather than activist elements
of the Salafis who propagate a return to 7th century life as it was at
the time of the Prophet Mohammed and his immediate successors.
The
UAE, despite publicly backing Qatar against calls that it be deprived
of its right to host the 2022 World Cup because of alleged wrongdoing in
its successful bid and the sub-standard working and living conditions
of foreign workers, has covertly worked against the Gulf state. Qatar in
September briefly detained two British human rights activists who were
investigating human and labour rights in the Gulf state. The detentions
exposed a network of apparently Emirati-backed human rights groups in
Norway, including the Global Network for Rights and Development (GNRD),
and France that seemingly sought to polish the UAE's image while
tarnishing that of Qatar. The Brits of Nepalese origin were acting on
behalf, a Norway-based group with alleged links to the UAE.
The
GNRD's International Human Rights Rank Indicator (IHRRI) listed the UAE
at number 14 as the Arab country most respectful of human rights as
opposed to Qatar that it ranked at number 94. The ranking contradicts
reports by human rights groups, including the United Nations Human
Rights Council (OHCHR), which earlier this year said it had credible
evidence of torture of political prisoners in the UAE and questioned the
independence of the country's judiciary. Egypt's State Information
Service reported in December that GNRD had supported the banning of the
Muslim Brotherhood as a terrorist organization and called for an
anti-Brotherhood campaign in Europe.
The New York Times and The
Intercept have since revealed that the UAE, the world's largest spender
on lobbying in the United States in 2013, had engaged a lobbying firm to
plant anti-Qatar stories in American media. The firm, Camstoll Group,
is operated by former high-ranking US Treasury officials who had been
responsible for relations with Gulf state and Israel as well as
countering funding of terrorism.
The New York Times reported that
Camstoll's public disclosure forms "filed as a registered foreign agent,
showed a pattern of conversations with journalists who subsequently
wrote articles critical of Qatar's role in terrorist fund-raising." The
Intercept asserted that Camstoll was hired less than a week after it was
established in late 2012 by Abu Dhabi-owned Outlook Energy Investments,
LLC with a retainer of $400,000 a month.
UAE opposition to Qatar
and the Muslim Brotherhood dates back at least a decade. Abu Dhabi Crown
Prince and Armed Forces Chief of Staff Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed bin
Zayed Al Nahayan warned US diplomats already in 2004 that "we are having
a (culture) war with the Muslim Brotherhood in this country," according
to US diplomatic cables disclosed by Wikileaks.
In 2009. Sheikh
Mohamed went as far as telling US officials that Qatar is "part of the
Muslim Brotherhood." He suggested that a review of Al Jazeera employees
would show that 90 percent were affiliated with the Brotherhood. Other
UAE officials privately described Qatar as "public enemy number 3",
after Iran and the Brotherhood.
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow
at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies as Nanyang
Technological University in Singapore, co-director of the Institute of
Fan Culture of the University of Würzburg and the author of the blog,
The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, and a forthcoming book with
the same title.
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