Yahoo – AFP,
David Harding, Jun 5, 2017
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| A picture taken on May 18, 2017, shows a general view of the Khalifa International Stadium in Doha after it was refurbished ahead of the Qatar 2022 FIFA World Cup (AFP Photo/KARIM JAAFAR) |
Doha (AFP)
- The diplomatic crisis sweeping the Gulf could invigorate a campaign by
critics of Qatar to strip Doha of the 2022 World Cup, experts said Monday.
Saudi
Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Egypt and Yemen were among those to
cut diplomatic ties with Qatar on the grounds that Doha supported extremist
groups "that aim to destabilise the region".
One of the
areas that could feel the impact is Qatar's hosting of the World Cup,
football's biggest tournament, in five years' time.
"This
is a massive escalation in pressure on Qatar," said Kristian Ulrichsen, a
Gulf analyst with the Baker Institute at Rice University in Houston. "I
think it will really have an impact if it lasts any time."
Since being
controversially chosen by FIFA in 2010 as the host, Qatar has maintained that
it is a politically secure nation despite its location in a volatile region.
Doha has
also emphasised that the tournament serves the entire Gulf, and not just the
tiny gas-rich emirate.
Nasser
Al-Khater, a senior figure with Qatar's World Cup organising body, recently
claimed that up to 1.3 million fans would visit Doha in 2022, the majority from
the Gulf and "mainly from Saudi Arabia".
But current
events may challenge those notions, Ulrichsen said.
"One
of its pitches (to secure the World Cup) was that Qatar is one of the most
stable countries in the Middle East," he told AFP.
'Looking
over their shoulder'
With that
potentially called into question -- and the fact that there are other countries
which could host the event at little notice -- organisers may be getting
anxious, Ulrichsen said.
"Qatar
will know that there are alternatives, so they will be looking over their
shoulder," he said.
Suggestions
have been made previously that the United States, one of the countries that
lost the race for the 2022 competition to Qatar, could take over hosting duties
if necessary.
The crisis
that erupted on Monday came only a few weeks after US President Donald Trump
visited Saudi Arabia to cement ties with Riyadh and called for Muslim countries
to unite against extremism.
In a brief
statement sent to AFP, football's governing body FIFA said it was "in
regular contact" with Qatar 2022 organisers and had "no further
comments for the time being".
Simon
Chadwick, professor of sports enterprise at Britain's Salford University, said
the diplomatic crisis "raises an important issue of risk assessment and
contingency planning" for the World Cup.
"The
closer we get to 2022, the more Qatar becomes exposed. In terms of reputation
and embarrassment, this is a big issue for Qatar," he said.
"As a
country, Qatar likes to hedge, in regional terms it hedges and I think it's
being forced by countries and organisations to stop that. I think there's an
awful lot to be resolved in five years."
Sponsorship deal cancelled
Already the
first sporting victim of the crisis has been claimed.
Saudi
football club Al-Ahli said just hours after the cut in diplomatic ties that it
would end its financial association with Qatar Airways, taking to Twitter to
announce "the termination of the sponsorship contract between the club and
Qatar Airways".
A three-year
sponsorship deal, worth an estimated $16 million a season (14 million euros)
with the Doha-based carrier was originally signed in October 2014 and renewed
in May this year.
Another
potential early victim could be this year's Gulf Cup of Nations, scheduled to
take place in December in Doha.
Qatar had
stepped in as host when Kuwait was stopped from hosting following its ban from
FIFA.
Among the
nations set to take part include Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and
Bahrain, who all cut diplomatic ties on Monday.
Saudi
Arabia and the UAE also announced they were suspending flights to Qatar and
banned their citizens from travelling to Doha.
Winning the
right to host the 2022 World Cup was a major coup for Qatar, which has used its
natural gas riches to promote its international profile. The country has said
it is spending almost $500 million every week on major infrastructure projects
related to the tournament.
Map of the Middle East showing countries which have severed diplomatic relations with Qatar pic.twitter.com/NVlrWuwqfJ— AFP news agency (@AFP) June 5, 2017


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