Barcelona football fans could face 15yrs in prison, $135K fine in UAE over Qatar sponsorship
In 2011, Barcelona FC signed a historic deal with Qatar Sports Investment to put a sponsor's logo on their shirts for the first time in 111 years. Now, however, the club’s Emirati fans could face jail time and large fines for wearing Barca jerseys.
While the football club’s sponsorship deal with Qatar Airways ends June 30 – with Japanese e-commerce company Rakuten occupying the coveted spot during the 2017-18 season – the increasing tensions in the Gulf region have inflicted substantial collateral damage.
So for those of you in the UAE wearing a Barcelona shirt with "Qatar Airways" you're gonna face a fine 😂🤔 #petty
— Haya Abdulrahman ♛ (@l_Haya_l) June 7, 2017
Earlier this week, UAE authorities announced that social media posts sympathetic to Qatar are punishable by three to 15 years in jail, or a fine of at least 500,000 AED (US$135,000).
READ MORE: UAE threatens Qatari sympathizers with jail terms up to 15yrs after diplomatic rift
Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates (UAE), Egypt and Bahrain have blacklisted 59 individuals and 12 entities which they claim link the nation of Qatar with terrorist groups.
A photo posted online by Qatari blogger Raed Al-Emadi purports to show extreme anti-Qatari censorship already taking place in one shopping mall the region.
في إحدى دول الجوار تم طمس حتى اسم #قطر
— Ræd Al-Emadi (@Ra_ed) June 8, 2017
من لبسة لاعبي برشلونة فأي فجور في الخصومة هذا؟#برشلونة منا ونحن من برشلونة😂#قطع_العلاقات_مع_قطرpic.twitter.com/gzCOxCw1L3
The UAE closed its airspace to all flights to and from Doha in a major escalation in simmering tensions in the region. Etihad and Emirates airways have suspended all flights to and from Doha with multiple regional carriers such as FlyDubai and Air Arabia expected to follow suit.
Qatar Airways and the Al Jazeera news agency are among the high profile companies caught up in the diplomatic spat.
"All customers booked on affected flights to and from the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia will be provided with alternative options, including the option of a full refund on any unused tickets and free rebooking to the nearest alternative Qatar Airways network destination," Qatar Airways said in a statement.
‘We’re not ready to surrender’: Pressure won’t force Qatar to change foreign policy – FM https://t.co/t9QM81PPywpic.twitter.com/6ulx0y8qkB
— RT (@RT_com) June 8, 2017
Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Bahrain, the UAE, Libya, Yemen and the Maldives also suspended diplomatic relations and transport links with Qatar on Monday.
Qatar’s food security may also be placed in jeopardy as it only has one land border with regional power-turned-rival Saudi Arabia.
Qatar’s 2022 FIFA World Cup is also at risk, as a multitude of critical construction projects will also face supply shortages.
Freedom of movement within the region has also been severely restricted; Qatar has given Saudi, Egyptian, Bahraini, Libyan, Yemeni and Emirati citizens 14 days to leave the country.
The governments of Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have responded in kind.
Qatar's credit rating cut over Gulf blockade crisis https://t.co/Ka8ltgqnzu
— RT (@RT_com) June 8, 2017