DOHA, Oct 25 — Qatar’s ruler today hit out at “double standards” unleashed in an “unprecedented campaign” of criticism over his country’s rights record ahead of this year’s football World Cup.

Just 26 days from the first game, Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al-Thani gave a rare public airing of the Islamic country’s frustration following years of attacks over its treatment of foreign workers and over LGBTQ and women’s rights.

“Since we won the honour of hosting the World Cup, Qatar has been subjected to an unprecedented campaign that no host country has faced,” the emir told Qatar’s legislative council.

Qatar initially accepted negative commentary “in good faith” and “even considered that some criticism was positive and useful, helping us to develop aspects that need to be developed,” the ruler said.

“But it soon became clear to us that the campaign continues, expands and includes fabrications and double standards, until it reached an amount of ferocity that made many wonder, unfortunately, about the real reasons and motives behind this campaign,” he said.

Fifa awarded the World Cup to an Arab country for the first time in 2010. It has since spent tens of billions of dollars on preparations but has faced intense scrutiny over human rights.

LGBTQ rights

Hours after the emir spoke, the challenges facing authorities when one million fans are expected to converge on Qatar were highlighted as a veteran British campaigner protested in Doha over the country’s criminalisation of homosexuality.

Peter Tatchell staged the protest outside Qatar’s National Museum, holding a banner that read: “Qatar arrests, jails and subjects LGBTs to ‘conversions’”.

The government had angrily rejected a report released yesterday by the Human Rights Watch group which said police have arbitrarily detained and abused members of the LGBTQ community ahead of the World Cup.

Homosexuality is illegal in Qatar and critics say women’s rights are restricted by male guardianship laws.

Tatchell, 70, was arrested for a similar protest before the 2018 World Cup in Russia.

This time, witnesses said police advised him to fold up his banner before they walked away.

Foreign workers

The emir also said the World Cup was a chance for Qatar to show “who we are, not only in terms of the strength of our economy and institutions, but also in terms of our civilisational identity.

“This is a great test for a country the size of Qatar that impresses the whole world with what it has already achieved.”

The Gulf state has faced particular attention over the foreign workers who have built the infrastructure for Qatar’s economic miracle.

Foreigners make up more than 2.5 million of the 2.9 million population.

Conditions on construction sites were long condemned by international unions — ranging from safety standards to hours worked in the searing summer temperatures.

Rights groups including HRW and Amnesty International have insisted that Qatar and Fifa should do more to compensate workers who died or suffered injury on Qatar’s mega projects.

They have demanded that Fifa set up a US$440 million (RM2 billion) compensation fund — equalling the World Cup prize money.

But reforms to the labour system and working practices have been praised by the union leaders who previously fought the government.

After a visit this week, Luca Visentini, secretary general of the European Trade Union Confederation, told AFP that more work needed to be done on implementation of reforms but that Qatar should be seen as “a success story”.

“The World Cup was undoubtedly an opportunity to accelerate change and these reforms can constitute a good example to be extended to other countries that host major sports events,” he said.

Fifa president Gianni Infantino has defended Qatar and said the World Cup will be the “best ever, on and off the field”. — AFP