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FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022

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  • Middle East expert Udo Steinbach has been advocating closer relations with the Gulf states for years.
    Udo Steinbach on Europe and the Gulf

    Let's have none of the old arrogance

    Middle East expert Udo Steinbach has been advocating closer relations with the Gulf states for years. Genuine interest in regional development, however, needs to look beyond the stereotypes. Birgit Svensson spoke to him in Baghdad

  • FIFA World Cup in Qatar 2022

    Did LGBTQ rights campaigns in Qatar help or hinder?

    Protests by Western activists at the FIFA World Cup may have backfired and sparked a backlash against gay, lesbian and queer communities in Qatar, critics say. By Cathrin Schaer

  • Qatar

    How Qatar turns its cash into foreign policy power

    For years, Qatar has pursued a "soft" foreign policy that helped make international friends and influence the powerful. It includes spending billions on everything from fashion, art and sport, to charities and industry. By Cathrin Schaer

  • During the World Cup in Qatar, much has been written about the role of women in the Gulf state, yet they themselves rarely get a word in edgeways. Karim El-Gawhary spoke to two Qatari women in Doha.
    Women's rights in Qatar

    Driving emancipation forward

    During the World Cup in Qatar, much has been written about the role of women in the Gulf state, yet they themselves rarely get a word in edgeways. Karim El-Gawhary spoke to two Qatari women in Doha

  • Will they, won't they? This evening's semi between Morocco and France will decide whether the Arab world's World Cup fairytale will see Morocco facing Argentina in the final.
    Arab world on tenterhooks

    World Cup semi-final – "We are all Moroccans"

    Morocco has taken the 2022 World Cup by storm, with the northwest Africans reaching the semi-finals for the first time in their soccer history. As the knockout match approaches, Birgit Svensson's public viewing report from Baghdad throws a different light on Morocco's recent victories in Qatar

  • One Love armbands are self-righteous and ignore some fundamental issues.
    FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022

    Qatar critics and their blind spots

    We are in favour of human rights. But One Love armbands are self-righteous and ignore some fundamental issues. Stefan Buchen examines the debate surrounding the World Cup in Qatar

  • Neither Israel's nor Palestine's footballers qualified for this year’s World Cup, yet the Israeli-Palestinian conflict appears present in Qatar.
    Qatar, Israel and the Palestinians

    Middle East conflict impacts World Cup

    With reported hostilities against Israeli journalists and the flag of the Palestinian territories flying on the streets and in the stadiums, it is clear the World Cup in Qatar is not apolitical. By Stefan Nestler and the DW team in Qatar

  • British-Egyptian Alaa Abdel Fattah, one of the leading youth leaders during the 2011 Arab Spring, started a hunger strike in prison on 2 April 2022. As COP27 began in Sharm El-Sheikh, Fattah announced he would stop drinking water. His aim: to highlight the plight of thousands of people – including human rights defenders, journalists, students, opposition politicians and peaceful protesters – currently languishing in Egypt’s jails.
    COVID-19, COP27 and World Cup 2022

    Crisis management in the Arab world

    November 2022 sees the Arab world firmly in the spotlight with the COP27 in Egypt and the FIFA World Cup in Qatar. Public trust in MENA governments is weak, thanks to their miserable record in protecting citizens’ rights, which leaves nations ill-equipped to handle complex crises like climate change or COVID-19. By Jan Voelkel

  • While airing pro-Palestinian sympathies has been allowed at the Qatar 2022 World Cup – people were even handing out "Free Palestine" T-shirts ahead of Argentina's match with Poland on Wednesday – security forces have clamped down on fans seeking to show support for protesters in Iran, who have been demanding an end to clerical rule there.
    FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022

    Football fans see double standard in stadium politics ban

    When is it and when is it not acceptable to display a political banner at the World Cup in Qatar? The answer seems to depend largely on the political message, with fans criticising what they see as inconsistent enforcement of FIFA rules by the host country.

  • Commentators from both inside and outside the Arabic-speaking world are asking why Qatar is being so harshly criticized, suggesting it has less to do with political issues and more to do with racism, Orientalism, even Islamophobia.
    Politics, Qatar and FIFA

    Is criticism of Qatar's World Cup racist?

    Locals in the Middle East have said European critics are showing bias and hypocrisy when they condemn Qatar. Observers agree that Qatar has had to deal with more criticism than usual for a World Cup host. Cathrin Schaer and Emad Hassan ask why

  • 2.5 million foreign workers have been the foundation of Qatar's economic miracle – helping pump oil and gas, building its World Cup stadiums and infrastructure and staffing the dozens of new hotels that have opened in the past five years. Rights groups say the workers have been massively abused.
    Qatar 2022

    Migrant workers enjoy FIFA World Cup on the cheap

    Shafeeq Saqafi paid $3 for the Argentina shirt he proudly wore when he sat with 15,000 other migrant workers in a hidden corner of Doha to watch Lionel Messi's side salvage their World Cup

  • Is this truly about human rights, or is it that Western pundits can’t stomach the idea that an Arab Middle East country is hosting the World Cup?
    Hypocrisy and human rights

    Qatar World Cup and Western double standards

    Ayman Mohyeldin from MSNBC asks: Is this truly about human rights, or is it that Western pundits can’t stomach the idea that an Arab Middle East country is hosting the World Cup?

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