The Guardian (USA)

Parliament urged to look at sportswash­ing clause in football bill

- Nick Ames

The United Kingdom’s parliament has been urged to revoke a clause in the new football governance bill that could leave the door open to sportswash­ing by authoritar­ian states.

Human Rights Watch (HRW) has drawn attention to a section of the bill that, it says, may point the way to a damaging increase in state ownership under certain conditions. The bill, currently being debated in the House of Commons, will define the powers of a long-promised independen­t regulator for English football but there are concerns that the new body will be unable to step in if the government waves unsavoury new owners through.

While the bill proposes new criteria for disqualify­ing prospectiv­e owners, section 37(2) stipulates that the regulator must take the government’s “foreign and trade policy objectives” into account when assessing their suitabilit­y. That has the potential, HRW believes, to severely dilute the regulator’s ability to block states from increasing their hold on the sport.

“A regressive clause in the bill will undermine the regulator’s independen­ce,” writes Robbie Newton, senior coordinato­r at HRW, in an article published on Monday. “Section 37(2) requires the regulator to consider the UK government’s ‘foreign and trade policy objectives’ when assessing prospectiv­e owners –which could hamper the regulator’s ability to block allied state actors from acquiring football clubs.

“Clearly, given the UK’s trade interests in the region, countries like Saudi Arabia or UAE seeking to acquire teams could trigger the applicatio­n of Section 37(2).”

State ownership has become a particular­ly pressing topic since the takeover of Newcastle United by Saudi Arabia’s public investment fund in 2021. The deal went through after passing the Premier League’s owners and directors test, which was satisfied by “legally binding assurances” that the

Saudi state would not have control over the club. Since 2008, Manchester City have been owned by Abu Dhabi United Group, led by the Emirati royal Sheikh Mansour, which is formally separate from the UAE state. Both clubs’ owners have been accused of using football to airbrush human rights abuses and other crimes in the states to which they are connected.

“Sportswash­ing is on the rise across global sport,” Newton continues. “Authoritar­ian states are increasing­ly looking to sport and sports’ infrastruc­ture as potential PR vehicles to launder their reputation­s and exert geopolitic­al influence. Acquiring football clubs has proved a particular­ly effective sportswash­ing tactic, as they hold considerab­le cultural significan­ce and lobbying power.” HRW claims that, under the bill’s new rules around “serious criminal conduct” linked to owners’ wealth, the takeovers of Newcastle and Manchester City would have been blocked.

The bill was introduced in March and is currently at committee stage, meaning amendments – such as any change to section 37(2) – can be proposed and potentiall­y passed.

 ?? Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA ?? Newcastle's takeover by chairman Yasir al-Rumayyan and their minority owner Amanda Staveley (right) in 2021 made state ownership a pressing topic.
Photograph: Peter Powell/EPA Newcastle's takeover by chairman Yasir al-Rumayyan and their minority owner Amanda Staveley (right) in 2021 made state ownership a pressing topic.

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