Naturalization policy: 12 countries play on behalf of Qatar team in World Cup
The Hamdeen regime, as usual, took the
non-moderate back roads as a way to achieve the alleged glory of its country,
the latest of which was hosting the 2022 World Cup.
Since the announcement of Qatar's hosting of
the World Cup, the Gulf emirate has been looking for ways to strengthen its
team with many strong players in order to compete for continental championships
and prepare to go far in a tournament that is the first participation in the
history of Qatar in the World Cup.
For this purpose, officials of the Qatar
Football Federation (QFA) followed the "naturalization policy" of a large number of players,
namely, granting Qatar nationality to players from outside the country to have
the Qatari football opportunity to play internationally.
Political and sports corruption
The Qatari team includes 15 players out of 27
Qatari nationals, from 12 different countries among Africa, Asia and Europe.
The Qatari corruption of Al-Hamdeen is not
limited to economic policies, support of terrorist organizations, nor has it
stopped naturalizing players from other countries to save the Qatari football
team, but it has also touched on the sport. While the Qatari regime is pushing
the militias to buy international clubs, it requests financial support for
Qatari football clubs.
Not long ago, the Amiri Diwan asked the Qatar
Stars League and the Ministries of Culture and Finance to allocate funds for
local clubs and players to buy foreign players for foreign clubs. However, the
big scandal was that part of the money went to European advertising and
promotion companies to promote the Qatari regime.
Continuing corruption
The scandals of the Qatari regime did not
stop. The month of May saw the return of corruption cases back to the forefront
after French judicial sources and sources close to the 2019 World Cup organized
a formal complaint against the head of the country's sports group.
International news agencies have reported that
French authorities accuse the president of the BN group of active corruption,
while accusing the former president of the International Federation of
Athletics Federations of corruption.
The details of the case were announced by the
French authorities at the end of May 2019, when Oryx Qatar Sports Invest Mint,
owned by Nasser Al Khulaifi and his brother Khaled, provided $3.5 million in
the fall of 2011 for a sports marketing company run by Masata Diak, son of the
former head of the international federation.
The funds were first paid on October 13, 2011
while the second was paid on November 7, 2011, just four days before the London
tournament. However, London managed to win the tournament from Doha.