World Cup Kicks Off With Welcome From Qatar’s Ruler

World Cup Kicks Off With Welcome From Qatar’s Ruler
The opening ceremony of FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 at Al Bayt Stadium in Al Khor, Qatar, on Nov. 20, 2022. Pawel Kopczynski/Reuters
Reuters
Updated:

AL KHOR, Qatar—Qatar opened the World Cup on Sunday with a lavish half-hour ceremony.

“People of all races, nationalities, beliefs, and orientations will gather here in Qatar and around screens across the continents to share in the exciting moments,” Qatar’s ruler Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani told the crowd in a tent-shaped stadium.

“How lovely it is that people can put aside what divides them to celebrate their diversity and what brings them together at the same time,” the emir said in the ceremony, during which he kissed the hand of his father who abdicated in 2013.

Tamim arrived at Al Bayt Stadium flanked by FIFA President Gianni Infantino, to a roaring crowd, and sat alongside other Arab leaders. A show unfolded on the pitch, featuring camels, American actor Morgan Freeman, Jungkook of K-pop boy band BTS, and Qatari singer Fahad Al-Kubaisi. Fireworks lit the sky.

Saudi Arabia’s crown prince and the presidents of Egypt, Turkey, and Algeria, as well as the U.N. Secretary-General, were among the leaders at the stadium, where Ecuador later scored a 2–0 victory over Qatar, the first World Cup host to lose their opening game.

The Muslim Gulf nation is staking its reputation on delivering a smooth tournament and has denied accusations of abuse of workers and discrimination. Governing body FIFA hopes the spotlight will now turn to action on the pitch.

Organizers have also denied allegations of bribery to win the rights to host soccer’s biggest event.

Soft Power

The soccer tournament, the first held in the Middle East and the most expensive in its history, is a culmination of Qatar’s soft power push, after a 3.5-year boycott by Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and Bahrain that ended in 2021.

The UAE, with a rapprochement of Doha that has been slower than that of Riyadh and Cairo, sent its vice president, who’s also the ruler of Dubai, where many World Cup fans have opted to stay.

There were signs of other thaws as Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, whose countries’ ties have been strained, shook hands in Qatar.

And for the first time, a direct commercial flight from Tel Aviv to Doha landed in Qatar despite the absence of formal bilateral ties, thanks to a deal brokered by FIFA.

Qatar hopes the event will cement it as a global player, display strength to rivals in the region, and placate Qatari frustrations at mounting criticism of the host nation.

Fan Festival Chaos

Throngs of fans are already in Doha, but the main rush will come later this week. Nevertheless, chaotic scenes broke out inside and outside a fan festival an hour before kickoff after organisers allowed too many supporters to flood the precinct.

Crowd control will be key, with roughly 1.2 million fans expected to visit the city—more than a third of Qatar’s population, which itself is made up mostly of foreign workers who vastly outnumber Qatari citizens.

Qatari Ahmed Al-Kuwari, 69, opted to stay home with his family to watch the opening and the match.

“Qatar has been a workshop and bees’ nest,” he told Reuters of the construction frenzy, considering intense criticism of Qatar as “hypocrisy.”

Alcohol is banned at stadiums but is available at the FIFA Fan Festival and other venues. Argentina fan Julio Cesar said he expected a great atmosphere, saying, “We'll drink before the match.”

For Daniel Oordt from the Netherlands, however, there was a feeling of “constant pressure” to not say or do the wrong thing.

“It’s not a fun atmosphere to have at a World Cup,” Oordt said.

Outside the city’s edges, workers can watch matches in a sports arena in an industrial zone, priced out of the stadiums many toiled to build along with other infrastructure for the event. No alcohol was being served.

“Of course I didn’t buy a ticket. They’re expensive, and I should use that money for other things—like sending it back home to my family,” Ghanaian national Kasim, a security guard who has worked in Qatar for four years, told Reuters.