Flag-draped fans poured into Qatar on Friday ahead of the Middle East’s first World Cup as organizers banned the sale of beer at stadiums — a last-minute decision that stunned FIFA sponsor Budweiser but was largely welcomed by the country’s conservative Muslims and shrugged off by some visitors.
This small, energy-rich country, home to some 3 million
people and roughly the size of Jamaica, expects another 1.2 million fans to fly
in for the tournament that begins on Sunday.
After Friday prayers, the talk of Doha became the sudden
ruling by the government to halt all beer sales at stadiums.
Many welcomed the decision in this conservative emirate,
which follows the same austere Wahhabi Islam of neighboring Saudi Arabia —
despite allowing beers, wine and liquor to be sold at discrete hotel bars in the
country. Already, the country’s some 300,000 citizens have criticized the
Western excesses of some celebrations and vehemently dismissed criticism of its
views on LGBTQ rights.
“The whole reason why I came to this country is so that I
can enjoy and have the facilities and the advantage of living in a modern
economy, but with Islamic heritage,” said Mohammad Ali, a 50-year-old doctor
from Sheffield, England, who lives in Qatar. “I wouldn’t want to see that
lifestyle compromised.”
“I wouldn’t want with my kids and my family enjoying my time
out and being confronted by a drunken — I’m not gonna say a hooligan — but
drunken and disorderly fans,” he added.
Alcohol will still be served in hotels, luxury suites and
private homes during the tournament. Budweiser continued its work turning a
luxury hotel into a massive themed bar. It won’t be cheap: a standard bottle of
beer went for a little over $15.
In Doha’s Souq Waqif market, 35-year-old Pablo Zambrano of
Ecuador shrugged off the news of the beer ban ahead of his country’s opening
night match against Qatar on Sunday. He’s staying with his with mother who
lives here and said the fridge already is stocked with beer, which foreigners
can buy legally in selected depots.
“There’s things about the alcohol and the women with the
dress codes,” Zambrano said, referring to the country’s conservative customs.
“It’s different. But it’s going to be good.”
Zambrano was one of a growing number of fans sightseeing in
the traditional market and along the Corniche, a seaside boulevard with views
of Doha’s glittering skyline.
Just down the street, 24-year-old vegetable seller Ajmal
Pial from Khulna, Bangladesh, took in the breeze with the city’s skyscrapers
stretched out behind him across the waters of the Persian Gulf.
But instead of his nation’s green and red disc flag, Pial
waved Brazil’s over his head as his friend took pictures of him. He and his
friends support Argentina and Brazil, two of the tournament favorites.
For Pial and others, the World Cup represents a pinnacle of work
in Qatar and likely a final hurrah before heading home as jobs slow. Labor
conditions in Qatar, like much of the Gulf Arab states, have been criticized
for exploiting the low-paid workers who built this former pearling port into a
desert metropolis.
Qatar has overhauled its labor laws, but activists have
asked for more to be done. There are no guarantees for freedom of speech in
Qatar, but Pial said he felt genuinely happy at the chance to see the
tournament.
His friend, 32-year-old Shobuz Sardar, also from Khulna,
Bangladesh, said part of that excitement came from the fact that it’s only the
second time that an Asian country hosts the World Cup, 20 years after Japan and
South Korea co-hosted the tournament.
He also hinted at the conditions he and other workers from
Asia can face in Qatar.
“You also know that there are too many people all here for
work, for jobs,” Sardar said. “They don’t have any option for having fun. This
World Cup makes them have fun.”
Laborers from the Middle East and Asian nations mixed with
fans marching up and down the Corniche. Across government buildings and
electronic displays, Qatar’s deep purple and white flag with its nine-jagged
points seemed to fly nearly everywhere.
For Qatar, coming off a yearslong boycott by four Arab
nations over a political dispute, nearly reaching the opening match shows they
were able to overcome. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken plans to visit
Qatar during the tournament — showing the close relationship America shares
with a nation hosting some 8,000 of its troops at its massive Al-Udeid Air
Base.
On the Corniche as the sun set and the call to prayers could
be heard, crowds gathered around a clock counting down to the opening match.
Qatari fans marched and chanted, waving a banner bearing the
face of its ruling emir, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani. That same image of
Sheikh Tamim, with the Arabic inscription “Tamim, the Glory,” could be seen
everywhere in Doha during the boycott.
Tarek Mujahid, a 37 year old from Alexandria, Egypt, praised
Qatar for being the first Arab nation to host the World Cup.
“I’m very, very, very, very happy — No. 1 because it’s an
Arab country” hosting, he said. -AP