FIFA 2022 Qatar
Twelve years ago today, Qatar was nominated to host the FIFA World Cup in 2010. In these twelve years, Qatar has spent about three hundred billion dollars in the construction and preparation of new stadiums, hotels, shopping malls, fan zones and residences with modern amenities.
It is said to be the most expensive World Cup in the history of the world and its cost is more than the total cost of all previous World Cups combined.
In these days, Doha airport will be the busiest airport in the world, where more than 900 passenger planes will land every day and according to a figure, nearly twelve million people will visit Qatar.
Qatar is using all possible innovations to provide visitors with art galleries, museums, art zones, national and international food stalls, music, children and family programs according to local culture and tradition. It has been arranged.
Despite such an expensive and lavish preparation, Qatar's hosting is being criticized on the global and social media simply because they have urged the visitors to
"Please respect our culture and traditions. We have bans on open drinking, homosexual flags and slogans, nudity, and closed-room acts on the streets."
Over the past few days, there has been a storm of misogyny on social media over this small petition, it seems as if Qatar has put its foot on "Gucci" and not on their tail.
My body is not allowing the inventors of the slogan "My country is my will".
The so-called Western human rights organizations and NGOs are making the same noise day and night.
"Boycott Qatar"
No student of history would be surprised at such a play. Because that is what these civilized black sheep in white skins have done for the last several hundred years.
Your dog. Dog, our dog Tommy.
A few months ago, when an English anchor asked the Security Chairman of the Qatar World Cup, Abdul Aziz Abdullah Al Ansari, about this topic, he said:
"We welcome everyone to our country, but visitors must respect our traditions. We cannot change our religion for just twenty-eight days."
This criticism and ridicule, which has been gaining momentum for the past few months, has now reached its peak, and you can estimate its severity from the fact that just one day before the World Cup, FIFA Chairman Gianni Infintino had to hold a press conference of about one and a half hours. The lip of which is something like this
"We can't do anything. Whoever wants to come, if he doesn't come, then he will go to hell and eat khasman."
If this World Cup was canceled under the pretext of security and public order in view of this boycott movement, then twelve years of Qatar's hard work and billions of dollars would be lost.
But taking such a big risk, the way this small country has bravely stood up for its traditions in front of the uncivilized, misguided and rogue group of the whole world is certainly worthy of praise and praise in every way.