Monday 28 May 2018

WC2018: Qatar’s beIN urges FIFA action on Saudi ‘piracy’


Doha (AFP) – Qatar’s beIN Media Group on Monday urged football’s governing body FIFA to take legal action against what it called pirate broadcasters in Saudi Arabia ahead of the World Cup.

“We have requested FIFA to take direct legal action against Arabsat and the indications we have show that they are behind that,” general counsel of beIN Sophie Jordan told AFP on Monday.

“We have asked FIFA to put direct pressure on the pirates,” she added.

BeIN says the expensively purchased broadcast rights it has secured for major sporting events in the region — including football’s biggest tournament which starts on June 14 — are being undermined by pirate broadcasters operating out of its much larger neighbour.

The Doha-based company has the rights to broadcast all 64 matches from Russia across the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region.

It is one of the tournament’s official broadcasters and plans to show matches in 24 countries.

In response, FIFA said it took matters of “intellectual property very seriously”.

“FIFA is working with its various partners to minimise issues relating to the infringement of its rights in the MENA region,” it told AFP.

BeIN said that since last October, a vast and sophisticated Saudi bootlegging network known as “beoutQ” — using a signal from Riyadh-based satellite provider Arabsat — had been illegally transmitting its broadcasts.

Illegal transmissions from beoutQ had appeared in Morocco, Jordan and Syria, and it was likely they would soon reach Asia and southern Europe, said beIN.

It added that channels showing movies, TV dramas and food programmes were also being pirated.

Tom Keaveny, beIN’s managing director in the MENA region, called it a “full piracy operation” that is heavily funded.

Jordan, beIN’s general counsel, said the pirates had “big plans for the World Cup”.

The piracy claim comes at a politically sensitive time in the Gulf, with Qatar boycotted by its neighbours, including Saudi Arabia, in a highly fractious year-long diplomatic and economic dispute.

Qatar has been isolated since June 5, 2017, accused by Saudi Arabia and its allies of supporting terrorism and being too close to Riyadh’s archrival, Iran — charges Doha denies.

Tensions have heightened as the blockade’s anniversary approaches.

– Exclusivity issue –

BeIN says it has been unable to secure legal representation in Saudi Arabia since the start of the boycott, and thus cannot take legal action in the kingdom.

The broadcaster has also called on European football’s governing body UEFA to go to the courts after it said last weekend’s Champions League final was broadcast illegally by beoutQ.

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