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Bayern Munich fans see red over club鈥檚 links with Qatar

Special Bayern Munich fans see red over club鈥檚 links with Qatar
Bayern Munich are among European football鈥檚 most storied names, five-time Champions League winners, serial Bundesliga winners and a model of financial prudence in an era of nine-figure transfer fees - but their Qatar links are angering supporters. (Getty Images)
Updated 28 April 2018

Bayern Munich fans see red over club鈥檚 links with Qatar

Bayern Munich fans see red over club鈥檚 links with Qatar
  • In August last year, Qatar鈥檚 Hamad International Airport expanded its sponsorship of Bayern Munich in a 鈧10-million-a-year deal
  • Qatar owns a 14.6 percent stake in Volkswagen, according to the automaker鈥檚 website, while Volkswagen subsidiary Audi owns 8.3% of Bayern

MUNICH: Bayern Munich are among European football鈥檚 most storied names, five-time Champions League winners, serial Bundesliga winners and a model of financial prudence in an era of nine-figure transfer fees.
So why have some fans begun protesting against the stewardship of the club?
The answer, in a word, is Qatar, which has strengthened its long-standing ties with Bayern amid a near year-long standoff with 海角直播, Egypt, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, who accuse the 2022 World Cup hosts of supporting terrorism.
In August last year, Qatar鈥檚 Hamad International Airport expanded its sponsorship of Bayern Munich in a 鈧10-million-a-year deal ($12 million) that put the $17 billion airport鈥檚 logo on the shirt sleeves of Germany鈥檚 most successful football club. Then, in February Bayern announced that the logo of state-owned Qatar Airways鈥 would be added to its shirt sleeves, replacing Hamad International, AFP reported, in what was described as a five-year deal that would be worth more annually than the 2017 agreement with Doha鈥檚 airport.
The relationship goes beyond mere sponsorship; Qatar owns a 14.6 percent stake in Volkswagen, according to the automaker鈥檚 website, while Volkswagen subsidiary Audi owns 8.3% of Bayern.
Bayern have also held their winter training camp in Doha for the past eight years and, pressed on the club鈥檚 failure to publicly castigate Qatar for the dire conditions for workers in its construction industry, chief executive Karl-Heinz Rummenigge in January said: 鈥淭he situation of the workers in Qatar has improved through football, although of course they can still get better,鈥 claiming Germany鈥檚 foreign minister Sigmar Gabriel had told him as much.
The former German international鈥檚 words attracted scorn from Bayern fans鈥 group Munich鈥檚 Red Pride, which responded by holding up banners in a home game against Werder Bremen quoting Rummenigge鈥檚 claim that the situation for low-paid workers in Qatar was improving alongside a picture of his face in which his eyes were replaced by red tomatoes.
鈥淚n Germany 鈥榯omatoes in his eyes鈥 is an adage that means someone doesn鈥檛 see obvious things or especially in our case wants to take people for fools,鈥 a spokesman for Munich鈥檚 Red Pride told Arab News.
鈥淎nd even though there are marginal improvements in labor conditions 鈥 which are difficult to judge 鈥 it鈥檚 not to the credit of greedy organizations like FIFA or functionaries of our club, but rather (due to) human rights organizations.鈥
Other Bayern fan groups echo those misgivings.

鈥淎mong many supporters, the prevailing view of Qatar鈥檚 sponsorship is negative,鈥 said Rick Joshua, a senior figure in The Red Dragons, Bayern Munich鈥檚 London supporters鈥 group.
鈥淚鈥檓 not keen on the Qatar deals because of human rights issues and the hush-up surrounding the World Cup bid. It doesn鈥檛 really sit too well with me. Whenever we reach the winter break and the team goes off to Qatar, that鈥檚 when I switch off.鈥
Bayern declined to answer specific questions from Arab News in regard to the club鈥檚 relationship with Qatar, instead providing a statement from Rummenigge.
鈥淲e鈥檙e seeing a positive development as far as the (current) situation in Doha is concerned,鈥 he said, citing the United Nations Labour Organization鈥檚 decision in November to end an investigation into the rights of migrant workers in Qatar and Doha鈥檚 pledge to phase out the kafala system, which ties an employee to their employer and has been likened to slavery.
鈥淎s a representative of the whole football family, FC Bayern plays its part toward ensuring this can be achieved,鈥 said Rummenigge. 鈥淲e are engaged in a global competition with the best European clubs. But our partners in Doha are also aware of our beliefs. We talk about these matters confidentially, and trust continues to grow with every conversation. That is the most important prerequisite for change.鈥
The International Labour Organization (ILO) has launched a three-year technical cooperation program in which it will work with Qatar to improve employment conditions and recruitment practices, ensure timely payment of wages and better protect against forced labor.
Laborers were working more than 72 hours per week at eight of 19 contractors engaged in construction work for the 2022 World cup, an independent audit published in March found. The Impact report described these practices as 鈥渃ritical鈥 non-compliance to the supposed limit of 60 hours per week, while laborers at five other firms were working 60-72 hours per week.
The report, while acknowledging some progress, also detailed various other malpractices, and Human Rights Watch believes Bayern must do more to press for immediate and lasting change in Qatar.
鈥淏ayern should address this issue. They try not to talk about it, saying that in private they tell the Qataris what they should do, but won鈥檛 do that in public,鈥 Wenzel Michalski, Human Rights Watch鈥檚 (HRW) Germany director, told Arab News.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 buy it. Why say things in private that you wouldn鈥檛 say in public? It鈥檚 kind of a lame excuse.鈥
Joshua said Rummenigge鈥檚 claim that Bayern were helping achieve lasting change in Qatar by engaging the Qataris privately was unconvincing and inadequate.
鈥淭here may be fewer workers collapsing with heat exhaustion, for example, but big problems remain. What we want is progress toward a situation we can say comfortably I don鈥檛 actually mind dealing with this country rather than going in with reservations,鈥 he said.
鈥淚t鈥檚 not just the failure to speak out 鈥 perhaps it鈥檚 understandable that you wouldn鈥檛 criticize a third party you鈥檙e trying to secure a business deal with 鈥 but also Bayern鈥檚 claims that changes are being made to improve the situation in Qatar. Are they really? The evidence suggests otherwise.
鈥淔or all the free trips the board members are given, for all the Rolex watches that are shipped back, it really has not made that much of a difference.鈥
Bayern鈥檚 website includes a section on the club鈥檚 values, noting its laudable achievements in helping save the likes of Borussia Dortmund and Eintracht Frankfurt from financial ruin and its long-standing charity work, as well as its 270,000 members which make it the biggest club in the world by that metric.
鈥淏e successful, but never forget the weak: FC Bayern is committed to this ideal of the 鈥渞eputable businessman,鈥溾 the club鈥檚 website states. 鈥淔C Bayern is also aware of its responsibility to the community, above and far beyond football 鈥 Those who are successful must help those who are weak.鈥
Bayern鈥檚 timid stance regarding Qatar contradicts these values, according to HRW鈥檚 Michalski.
鈥淪ports should be about fair play and what happens to migrant workers is not fair. There are improvements and we acknowledge that, but these improvements are mainly on paper or on those construction sites where big international companies are building the (World Cup) stadiums, for example,鈥 said Michalski, noting HRW was not against the club receiving sponsorship from Qatar but that it should use its prestige to better influence decision makers in Doha.
鈥淎ll the other construction sites which are for infrastructure needed to host the World Cup, these aren鈥檛 checked, and we don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going on there,鈥 added Michalski.
鈥淏ayern Munich can really help improve the lives of hundreds of thousands of people who work long hours in the heat for little money.鈥

WHY ARE BAYERN TAKING QATARI MONEY?
- Bayern strolled to a sixth straight league title this season, with the Bavarian giants鈥 financial might and ability to buy their domestic rivals鈥 best players turning the German league into little more than a procession. Yet competing against European football鈥檚 elite has proved tougher, both on and off the field.
- Bayern won the Champions League in 2013, the club鈥檚 third appearance in the final in four years, but have since failed to get past the semifinals and in terms of revenue are slipping behind Europe鈥檚 big three of Manchester United, Barcelona and Real Madrid, despite being utterly dominant domestically in a country that boasts Western Europe鈥檚 largest population and biggest economy.
- Germany鈥檚 domestic league cannot command a premium in terms of broadcast income and sponsorship versus its continental rivals 鈥 the Premier League earned 拢2.4 billion ($3.3 billion) in broadcast revenues 2016-17, dwarfing the 鈧628 million euros ($778 million) Germany鈥檚 Bundesliga is estimated to have received last season.
- Germany鈥檚 egalitarian ownership rules require that clubs, with a few exceptions, be majority-owned by their members, preventing wealthy benefactors from taking control, unlike in the Premier League where foreign business magnates have acquired most clubs, enhancing competitiveness and helping bring in a slew of superstar players that in turn swell commercial and consumer interest in England鈥檚 top flight.
- German ticket prices are less than half those of England, The Telegraph reported, meaning Bayern have sought to maximize their commercial partnerships, such as with Qatar, to remain competitive on the continental stage.
- Bayern鈥檚 commercial income is the biggest in football globally, providing 58 percent of the club鈥檚 revenue in 2016-17, which totaled 鈧587.8 million, down from 鈧592 million a year earlier, according to Deloitte鈥檚 annual Money League. That compares with 46 precent at Barcelona, 45 percent at Real Madrid and 48 percent at Manchester United, with Bayern the only one of that quartet to suffer a revenue decline last season in home currency terms.