British LGBT rights campaigner Peter Tatchell has called on team captains to “devote 30 seconds” after each match at the 2022 World Cup to speak out on Qatar’s human rights record.
It comes after Australia issued a statement criticising Qatar’s treatment of migrant workers and LGBTQ+ people.
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Tatchell, who was stopped from protesting in Doha on Tuesday, said: “Australian football stars are leading the way.
“They have set the gold standard.”
The 70-year-old activist added: “I hope that every other national team will follow their lead and that all team captains will devote 30 seconds of every post-match news conference to affirm their commitment to the rights of LGBTs, women and migrant workers.
“That would be a fantastic, brilliant thing to do and I know it would be so appreciated by Qatari people, who are often privately and secretly hoping for a more democratic and human rights respecting government.”
The decision to stage the World Cup in Qatar, a country where homosexuality can be punishable by death, has been heavily criticised since Fifa made the announcement in 2010.
Tatchell told BBC Radio 5 Live that the World Cup “is something that should go to nations who respect rights and do not discriminate”.
The founder of Liverpool’s LGBT+ supporters group Kop Outs, Paul Amann, said he was not aware of a “single out, gay football fan” that wants to go to the World Cup in Qatar.
“I’m told by hundreds of other LGBT+ fans of football, nobody is interested in going and all the different groups are reporting the same issues – that people don’t want to go because it’s not a place the LBGT+ people are welcome,” he said.
Amann and his husband were invited by organisers of the 2022 World Cup to visit in 2019, a visit he describes as both “amazing and terrifying”.
“To go into a country where on the statute book they have the death penalty for being gay, was not an easy thing to contemplate in the first instance,” Amann said.
“We went with an ambition to engage, to try and encourage that country and the leadership, with it being the World Cup, to really move things forward to make sure it could be a World Cup for everybody.
“They made various promises along the lines of ‘yes, everybody is welcome’ and what they’ve done subsequently is prove that everybody will not be welcome, because they’ve continued to oppress LGBT+ people in their own country.”
‘We don’t discriminate’
On Wednesday, the UK’s Foreign Secretary James Cleverly told LBC that LGBT football fans who attend the tournament in Qatar should show “a little bit of flex and compromise” in order to be “respectful of the host nation”.
His comments were criticised by the Labour Party as “shockingly tone-deaf” and Conservative party chair Nadhim Zahawi contradicted Cleverly, saying LGBTQ+ football fans travelling to next month’s World Cup in Qatar should not have to compromise on their sexuality.
In response to Cleverly’s comments, Qatar’s ambassador to the UK, His Excellency Fahad bin Mohammed Al-Attiyah said: “We are doing everything we can to make sure this is a safe and secure tournament for all fans.
“We’re not asking anybody to change who they are, all we’re saying is that in life you respect others to respect your own values and norms in cultures.
“We don’t discriminate, nobody is going to be asked at any check-points to prove their gender or sexuality.
“I would say we’re a hospitable country with open hearts and open arms to welcome friends, colleagues and the people of England and Wales. They should come and support their team, have a great time, feel safe and get to know the host country’s culture.”

Earlier this week, campaigner Tatchell led a one-man protest in the host nation, holding a placard reading “Qatar arrests, jails & subjects LGBTs to conversion”, with the hashtag “#QatarAntiGay”.
Al-Attiyah called Qatar an “open international society” and said that nobody had been persecuted based on their gender identity.
“I would say holding hands is totally permitted in any culture, even in our culture. Common holding hands is not a problem at all,” he said.
“But there are certain interpretations as to what would be a display of affection, in a particular country that might be different in another. So I think one just has to be mindful of the norms and cultures of Qatari society in that respect.”
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