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Free speech isn鈥檛 a contender at the 2022 World Cup

Iran and the United States of America during the national anthems before a group stage match during the 2022 World Cup at Al Thumama Stadium

 

Danielle Parhizkaran / USA TODAY Sports

Players from Iran and the United States of America during the national anthems before a group stage match during the 2022 World Cup at Al Thumama Stadium in Doha, Qatar.

Depending on who you ask, you鈥檒l get a different answer about what鈥檚 center stage at the World Cup right now. Is it football? Maybe soccer? 

Or is it whitewashing?

For critics of FIFA鈥檚 decision to hold the event in Qatar, the games themselves take a backseat to the ethics of hosting a major sporting event amid the backdrop of human rights abuses, like the country鈥檚 treatment of and its criminalization of .  

FIFA President Gianni Infantino attempted to this criticism in a press conference ahead of the games, claiming the 鈥渙ne-sided moral lesson is just hypocrisy.鈥

FIFA President Gianni Infantino smiles during The FIFA World Cup 2026
FIFA President Gianni Infantino smiles during The FIFA World Cup 2026 announcement press conference on June 16, 2022 (Jessica Alcheh / USA TODAY Sports)

鈥淚 诲辞苍鈥檛 have to defend Qatar, they can defend themselves. I defend football. Qatar has made progress and I feel many other things as well,鈥 Infantino explained. Citing his childhood 鈥渞ed hair and freckles,鈥 he added, 鈥淥f course I am not Qatari, Arab, African, gay, disabled or a migrant worker. But I feel like them because I know what it means to be discriminated and bullied as a foreigner in a foreign country.鈥

He also wrote, in a to all competing teams, 鈥淸P]lease do not allow football to be dragged into every ideological or political battle that exists.鈥 His strategy echoes that of the International Olympic Committee, which questions and complaints about the human rights abuses in China around the 2022 Beijing Olympics.  

Teams, players, journalists, and fans encounter censorship

But ideological and political battles nevertheless plague the games, whether Infantino likes it or not. Since before the World Cup even began, a series of public disputes over how fans, players, and teams could express themselves caused headaches for FIFA.

Captains from seven European teams, including England and Germany, originally planned to display rainbow armbands until FIFA yellow cards for players wearing them. Regarding Qatar鈥檚 criminalization of homosexuality, Infantino said at his press conference, 鈥淗ow many gay people were prosecuted in Europe? . . . Sorry, it was a process. We seem to forget.鈥

The teams said they were 鈥渧ery frustrated鈥 by the 鈥渦nprecedented鈥 decision and 鈥渨ere prepared to pay fines that would normally apply to breaches of kit regulations鈥 but were to accept in-game penalties that would hinder gameplay. Germany鈥檚 team a picture of its players covering their mouths in protest of the decision, and stating that the armband 鈥渨asn鈥檛 about making a political statement.鈥 They added, 鈥淒enying us the armband is the same as denying us a voice.鈥 FIFA also demanded Belgium鈥檚 team change its away jerseys to the word 鈥渓ove鈥 from the inside collar. 

It wasn鈥檛 just players whose speech was limited by FIFA. Multiple journalists reported negative interactions with Qatari security, including Danish journalist Rasmus Tantholdt, whose was blocked and shoved by security. American sports analyst Grant Wahl had two run-ins with officials. First, security guards forced him to a picture he took on his phone at the media center. After that, he was disallowed by security from entering the stadium, and temporarily detained, because his , which showed a rainbow around a soccer ball, was 鈥渘ot allowed.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

The protests sparked in Iran by Mahsa Amini, a 22-year-old woman who died after her arrest by the country鈥檚 morality police, also found their way into the World Cup. Iranian fans holding pre-revolutionary as a statement against the country鈥檚 government were denied entry to the team鈥檚 game unless they handed the flags over to security. The same went for fans wearing protest shirts, which had to be turned inside out. 

More concerningly, Iran鈥檚 team could face repercussions for its own small act of protest during the games. In their game against England, the players chose to remain silent, rather than sing along, during their country鈥檚 anthem. As the in China have demonstrated so well, what we 诲辞苍鈥檛 voice can be just as powerful as what we do.

The laws of Qatar are, to put it mildly, a pretty big asterisk in university policy.

Some Iranian figures seemingly agree that the protest is notable 鈥 and they鈥檙e . Mehdi Chamran, chairman of Tehran鈥檚 city council, said Iran 鈥渨ill never allow anyone to insult our anthem and flag鈥 and another politician called for the team to be replaced with supporters of the government. A newspaper loyal to the country鈥檚 supreme leader accused 鈥渇oreign media鈥 of a 鈥渞uthless and unprecedented psychological-media war . . . to create a gap between the people of Iran and the members of the Iranian national football team.鈥 It鈥檚 not clear if or how the Iranian government will ultimately respond, but its of protesters at home continues to worsen.

It may suit leaders like Infantino, the International Olympic Committee, or Qatari officials to act as if their games should be immune from politics and controversy. But by acting to remove some kinds of expression from the arena, they鈥檙e making political statements of their own 鈥 whether they admit it or not. 

Censorship in Qatar is old news for American universities

The suppression of certain viewpoints at the World Cup is a disappointment, to be sure. But it鈥檚 no surprise. After all, this is a lesson universities that have expanded into Qatar, and the Gulf states broadly, have learned all too well. As I told Patrick Jack at last week, FIFA 鈥渋s getting a crash course in what American universities have been slowly experiencing over the past decade.鈥

FIRE has covered this censorship, and the perils of opening satellite campuses in unfree countries like Qatar and China, for years. In 2018, Georgetown University in Qatar canceled a debate about whether 鈥渕ajor religions should portray God as a woman鈥 after the hashtag, 鈥淕eorgetown Insults God,鈥 went viral online. Georgetown initially claimed the event didn鈥檛 follow event approval guidelines, but its office of communications then admitted the debate 鈥渃reated a risk to safety and security of our community鈥 and that the university 鈥渋s committed to the free and open exchange of ideas, while encouraging civil dialogue that respects the laws of Qatar.鈥 The laws of Qatar are, to put it mildly, a pretty big asterisk in university policy.

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FIRE challenged Georgetown over the cancellation, citing the university鈥檚 free speech commitments, but the university doubled down, saying (emphasis added) that students 鈥渕ay host events on campus that are in accordance with Qatari law.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

A little over a year after the Georgetown debate cancellation, Northwestern University鈥檚 Qatar campus experienced its own controversy after it canceled an event featuring a gay musician, citing security issues. FIREcriticized Northwestern鈥檚 behavior here too, suggesting that satellite campuses were promising students rights that they couldn鈥檛 deliver in practice. 

And then the Qatar Foundation, a state-linked nonprofit and a partner of Northwestern, that Northwestern was essentially lying about the reasons for the cancellation. It wasn鈥檛 canceled due to 鈥渟ecurity concerns,鈥 as Northwestern claimed. Instead, it was canceled because it 鈥減atently did not correlate鈥 with 鈥淨atari laws as well as the country鈥檚 cultural and social customs.鈥 Northwestern, at the time, denied the foundation鈥檚 account, saying it 鈥渞espectfully disagree(s)鈥 with the comments and reaffirming its claims about security concerns. 

The university鈥檚 official statements, hard to believe two years ago, are even less believable now. Patrick Jack鈥檚 recent piece in includes an interview with Craig LaMay, who was dean at Northwestern鈥檚 Qatar campus during the controversy. LaMay outright says the Qatar Foundation told the campus to cancel the event. 

鈥淧rofessor LaMay said that while he was dean of the Northwestern campus, he was ordered by the Qatar Foundation 鈥 the state-led organisation that runs Education City 鈥 to shut down an event because a band with an openly gay lead singer was on the schedule,鈥 Jack wrote.

In short, both the dean of the campus at the time and Northwestern鈥檚 on-the-ground partner in Qatar are very clear: The Qatar Foundation directed Northwestern, an American university with strong commitments to speech and academic freedom, to cancel an event because it conflicted with Qatari values. Still, Northwestern repeatedly denies this. 

Northwestern鈥檚 students and faculty in both Evanston, Illinois, and Education City in Qatar should be asking some very tough questions of university leadership right now: Did Northwestern lie about the series of events triggering the 2020 event cancellation? And does the Qatar Foundation make the calls over what can be said on Northwestern鈥檚 campus? The university community deserves the truth. 

The World Cup may serve as a useful branding opportunity for Qatar, whose leaders want to shift the narrative away from state suppression of human rights and abuse of migrant workers and onto platitudes about engagement and cooperation. But no matter how successful this PR campaign is, it can鈥檛 paper over the reality of censorship and human rights abuses on the ground. American satellite campuses have illustrated this well enough.

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