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Northwestern University in Qatar partner claims controversial event was canceled due to ā€˜Qatari lawsā€™, ā€˜cultural and social customsā€™

Northwestern University in Qatar

Northwestern University in Qatar is located within Doha's Education City complex, also home to several other prominent American satellite campuses. (EQRoy/Shutterstock.com)

When on Monday that it canceled an event featuring Lebanese indie rock band Mashrouā€™ Leila, whose lead singer is openly gay, it stated that it did so ā€œout of abundance of caution due to several factors, including safety concerns for the band and our communityā€ after social media users demanded its cancellation. As we noted earlier this week, NU-Q also affirmed its commitment to academic freedom at its campuses in the U.S. and overseas.

But the , ā€œa state-linked non-profit body in the conservative Gulf Arab stateā€ and NU-Q partner, disagrees.

The Qatar Foundation NU-Qā€™s account to Reuters, claiming it knows of no ā€œsecurity concernsā€ to justify cancellation, and contends that the event was canceled because of Qatarā€™s laws and ā€œcultural and social customsā€:

ā€œWe place the utmost importance on the safety of our community and currently do not have any safety or security concerns.ā€

ā€œWe also place the very highest value on academic freedom and the open exchange of knowledge, ideas and points of view in the context of Qatari laws as well as the countryā€™s cultural and social customs. This particular event was canceled due to the fact that it patently did not correlate with this context.ā€

A university spokesperson, however, that the Qatar Foundationā€™s account is wrong:

Yates said in a Wednesday email to The Daily the University ā€œrespectfully disagree(s)ā€ with the Qatar Foundationā€™s statement. Yates reiterated that the event was moved from Doha to Evanston after University leadership discussed the situation, including concerns for safety and security, with Mashrouā€™ Leila members and together agreed on changing the location.

ā€œAcademic freedom is a foundational principle for us at Northwestern, and one for which we do not compromise,ā€ the email read. ā€œWe look forward to hosting Mashrouā€™ Leila on an even larger platform in Evanston.ā€

As we wrote previously, NU-Qā€™s behavior is reminiscent of that of   ā€” also with the Qatar Foundation ā€” where a student debate about god and gender was shut down in 2018 after a similar social media backlash. Like NU-Q, GU-Q cited its commitment to academic freedom in Qatar. But it later clarified that students and faculty ā€œmay host events on campus that are in accordance with Qatari lawā€ (emphasis added). 

Northwestern and Georgetown have made promises to defend academic freedom in Qatar. GU-Q, at last, has acknowledged that expression on its campus is limited by Qatari law. And the Qatar Foundation, a partner to both universities, has that it ā€œplace[s] the very highest value on academic freedom and the open exchange of knowledge . . . in the context of Qatari laws as well as the countryā€™s cultural and social customs.ā€&²Ō²ś²õ±č;

FIRE deserve to know what degree of academic freedom and free expression both campuses can really offer. Because, right now, it doesnā€™t seem like their policies reflect reality. 

If you agree that American universities should be honest with students about what they can deliver, you can add your name to our ā€œCommitment to Campus Free Expression at Home and Abroad.ā€&²Ō²ś²õ±č;

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