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Saudi Arabia embraces western sports to rehabilitate global image

Saudi Arabia made sports a priority in 2016, but the push comes with complications. Western businesses have faced boycotts amid accusations that they are aiding a public relations initiative from an oppressive Saudi government

By Alan Rappeport
Published: Dec 3, 2019

Saudi Arabia embraces western sports to rehabilitate global imageMohammed Alhamdan, third from left, dancing with friends at a pop-up shop event in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on Oct. 10, 2019. As with international companies, young people in Saudi Arabia are also adjusting to new boundaries and calibrating their ambitions. (Tasneem Alsultan/The New York Times)

Riyadh, Saudi Arabia — On Halloween, as two female WWE wrestlers battled inside a roaring King Fahd International Stadium, Najla Ibrahim stood with a hand on her heart and another in the air, capturing the moment with her smartphone. For years, the nurse from Riyadh followed wrestling from afar and yearned for the day when women would take the ring in her country.

“I’m very proud because they are making history,” Ibrahim, 23, dressed in a black abaya and seated next to her older sister, said as the match ended under a shower of fireworks. “I’ve been waiting for this for so long.”

A year after the state-directed assassination of Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi Arabian dissident columnist for The Washington Post, the government of Saudi Arabia is accelerating efforts diversify its economy, cultivate domestic spending and polish its global image by broadening cultural offerings centered on Western sports and entertainment.

Staging a women’s wrestling match is no small feat in a kingdom where strict interpretation of Islamic law has long dictated that women be segregated, wear full-body coverings and have a male guardian. While the moment was notable, it was also carefully manufactured, stirring debate about whether Saudi Arabia is changing or just glossing over its flaws.

“It’s definitely ‘sportswashing,’ ” said Philippe Nassif, Amnesty International’s advocacy director for the Middle East and North Africa. “In the case of Saudi Arabia, they are infamous for the oppression of women’s rights and ethnic and racial minority rights. What better way to attempt to change that image than an all women’s wrestling match?”

The relationship between international brands like World Wrestling Entertainment and the Saudi government is symbiotic, as companies seek untapped markets while the kingdom tries to move its economy beyond dependence on oil production.

But the push comes with complications. Western businesses and stars have faced backlash and boycotts amid accusations that they are aiding a public relations initiative from an oppressive Saudi government.

Getting into the game.
Saudi Arabia made sports a priority in 2016, as part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s “Vision 2030” economic development program. To lay the groundwork, Princess Reema bint Bandar Al Saud, now Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States, worked with a U.S. lobbying firm last year to set up meetings with the National Basketball Association, Major League Soccer, World Surf League and Formula One auto racing to discuss bringing international sports to the kingdom.

Big money soon flowed. In July, Saudi Arabia’s General Sports Authority announced a $650 million investment to develop local athletes and teams and to attract international events. At an investment conference in Riyadh in October, Prince Abdulaziz bin Turki Al-Faisal, chairman of the General Sports Authority, explained how making Saudi Arabia a hub of global sports could lift economic growth and create thousands of jobs.

“A big part of the change within the kingdom is the sector of sport, and growing the sector of sport,” he said.

Wrestling is one sliver of Saudi Arabia’s new appetite for athletics.

This month, Anthony Joshua and Andy Ruiz Jr. will travel to a custom-built arena in Diriyah, outside Riyadh, for a heavyweight boxing title fight billed as the “Clash on the Dunes.” February brings the debut of the Saudi Cup, a horse race with a $20 million purse — the richest in history. A Ladies European Tour golf tournament is being planned for March.

“We are in a really huge transformation, softening the image,” Majed Al-Sorour, chief executive of the Saudi Golf Federation, said on the sidelines of the Future Investment Initiative conference in Riyadh in October.

A legacy of oppression persists.
Critics of Saudi Arabia contend that its embrace of Western sports and entertainment is a diversion to distract from a grim human rights record.

“I see all of this more as a way for the government to generate revenues from things other than oil than a genuine effort by the government to grant freedom,” said Hala Aldosari, a Saudi scholar at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The CIA concluded last year that the crown prince personally ordered the killing of Khashoggi. Since then, the kingdom has worked with international public relations firms to rehabilitate its reputation, and the crown prince has said he takes “full responsibility” for the murder. But international observers say human rights violations continue.

Amnesty International condemned the kingdom in October for arresting and detaining civil society activists and criticized the Saudi government for cloaking in secrecy the trial of those involved in the Khashoggi killing and for mass executions in April of Shiite Muslims who participated in anti-government protests.

A Human Rights Watch report last month said despite advances for Saudi women in the last year, numerous women’s rights advocates continued to be detained, charged with criminal offenses and tortured for speaking out.

Conditions for journalists who call for reform remain risky. The human rights group ALQST said Nov.25 that Saudi authorities arrested at least eight bloggers and journalists in five cities across the country in November, raiding their homes and seizing their laptops and cellphones.

“They are trying to cover up their abuses by holding high-profile sporting events and spectacles supported by businesspeople, politicians and sporting figures around the world,” ALQST said in a statement.

International brands tread carefully.
For Western athletes and entertainers, doing business in Saudi Arabia remains fraught. Novak Djokovic and Rafael Nadal faced criticism last year for planning to play an exhibition tennis match in Jeddah. They eventually withdrew, citing an injury to Nadal.

In July, rapper Nicki Minaj withdrew from a music festival after an outcry from critics of Saudi Arabia’s treatment of women and its ban on homosexuality.

For corporations, boycotting Saudi Arabia is more difficult.

Netflix came under fire this year for pulling an episode of Hasan Minhaj’s show “Patriot Act” in Saudi Arabia because of the show’s criticism of the crown prince and the Saudi-led military campaign in Yemen. Reed Hastings, the chief executive of Netflix, offered a blunt assessment of the decision at a New York Times DealBook conference in November, saying the company was “not in the truth to power business.”

Formula E, the electric motor sport racing series, also faced questions about its decision to open its season in Saudi Arabia last year, weeks after Khashoggi was murdered. Last month, the event was back again, drawing thousands of fans and musical entertainers from Britain and Norway.

“I think Saudi is going through a period of change and I think we need to support the change,” Alejandro Agag, the founder of Formula E, said in an interview in Riyadh. “Sport is a neutral thing that brings people together.”

Ernie Els, the champion golfer from South Africa who is helping the Saudi government establish itself as a global golf destination, offered a similar rationale. Despite backlash for his involvement with the Saudis, he said he hoped golf could help the country in the same way rugby helped unite South Africa, under the leadership of President Nelson Mandela, in the 1990s after apartheid.

“I understand the concern from the international community, but you have to start somewhere,” Els said in an interview.

©2019 New York Times News Service

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