World Cup qualification will “unite Iraq”

Published July 1, 2014
“Football is life for Iraqis, and we all remember the year 2007, when all the people went out in the street, no Sunni and no Shia and no Kurds -- everyone behind the team.“ -Photo by Reuters
“Football is life for Iraqis, and we all remember the year 2007, when all the people went out in the street, no Sunni and no Shia and no Kurds -- everyone behind the team.“ -Photo by Reuters

BAGHDAD: Raad Abdulhussein sits glued to a television in a Baghdad cafe, anxious over the dual concerns of his team trailing in a World Cup match, and the danger of bombings.

He puffs continually on a waterpipe as he sits quietly with three friends in the “Facebook” cafe, the silence only broken by shouts or clapping when the Netherlands advance toward Mexico's goal.

“Football brings us together,” says Raad, a 30-year-old taxi driver, who visits the cafe every day with his friends to watch the matches, which due to the time difference are broadcast in the evening in Iraq.

“It is our only way to leave the atmosphere of worry and tension and fear of the unknown,” he says.

“A car may explode at any moment, or a bomb, or a person enters the cafe and blows himself up,” Raad says.

This year's World Cup comes during an unprecedented decline in security within Iraq, with Sunni militants led by the Islamic State of Iraq and Al Sham (ISIS) jihadist group overrunning parts of five provinces in a lightning offensive that Iraqi soldiers and police are struggling to contain.

While the militant drive has yet to truly threaten Baghdad, the group's spokesman has vowed its forces will push on to the Iraqi capital and Shia shrine cities farther south.

But the offensive is by no means the first time Baghdad residents have faced threats while going out to watch matches -- the capital has lived under constant threat of bombings and violence for years.

Cafes are especially dangerous places, as militants often target them and other places where crowds of people gather, including markets and mosques.

Late last year, Baghdad security officials even held a seminar for cafe owners on how to deter and stop suicide bombers, after nearly 50 cafes were bombed nationwide in barely six months.


Danger worsened in Ramazan


That danger is compounded during the current holy Muslim fasting month of Ramazan, when militants sometimes carry out attacks following iftar that breaks the daily fast.

But with the World Cup only held every four years, football-crazed Iraqis still take to cafes to watch matches, especially as many suffer lengthy power cuts that prevent them from tuning in at home.

“The atmosphere of the (World Cup) outside the home is better,” says Osama Salem, a 31-year-old salesman.

“The World Cup is organised once every four years -- do we sit in our homes and give in to fear?” he continues, while trying to focus on the match, which the Netherlands ultimately won.

“We sit and we are afraid, but what can we do?”

“God willing, this ordeal will end,” he says, fatalistically adding that if it is one's time to die, you will die wherever you are.

In sharply-divided Iraq, football is one of the few unifiers. This was especially the case in 2007, when the country cheered on the national side as it won the Asia Cup at the height of a brutal sectarian war in which tens of thousands were killed.

“The World Cup is the most beautiful thing. The whole world is watching it, and the people here are overjoyed by it and come to watch until late at night,” says Ali Hussein, a 21-year-old who works at the Facebook cafe, where patrons must go through strict security measures before they enter.

“Football is life for Iraqis, and we all remember the year 2007, when all the people went out in the street, no Sunni and no Shia and no Kurds -- everyone behind the team.“

“If Iraq qualified for the World Cup, maybe it would unite us again. “

Opinion

Editorial

Strange claim
Updated 21 Dec, 2024

Strange claim

In all likelihood, Pakistan and US will continue to be ‘frenemies'.
Media strangulation
Updated 21 Dec, 2024

Media strangulation

Administration must decide whether it wishes to be remembered as an enabler or an executioner of press freedom.
Israeli rampage
21 Dec, 2024

Israeli rampage

ALONG with the genocide in Gaza, Israel has embarked on a regional rampage, attacking Arab and Muslim states with...
Tax amendments
Updated 20 Dec, 2024

Tax amendments

Bureaucracy gimmicks have not produced results, will not do so in the future.
Cricket breakthrough
20 Dec, 2024

Cricket breakthrough

IT had been made clear to Pakistan that a Champions Trophy without India was not even a distant possibility, even if...
Troubled waters
20 Dec, 2024

Troubled waters

LURCHING from one crisis to the next, the Pakistani state has been consistent in failing its vulnerable citizens....