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| President of The Federation Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) Gianni Infantino delivers a speech during the elective assembly of the Italian Football Federation (FIGC) on October 22, 2018 at the Hilton hotel of Rome’s Fiumicino airport. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP) |
FIFA,
UEFA and several of the world’s top football leagues on Tuesday
condemned alleged piracy of television rights by the “beoutQ” network,
which Qatar claims is backed by Saudi Arabia.
Qatar, host of the 2022 World Cup, and the Doha-based beIN Media
Group have described beoutQ as a vast and sophisticated Saudi
bootlegging network that has been transmitting stolen programmes via
Riyadh-based satellite provider Arabsat.
FIFA, UEFA, the English Premier League, La Liga, the German
Bundesliga and the Asian Football Confederation weighed in on Tuesday by
blasting beoutQ’s actions as “a clear and flagrant breach of our
intellectual property rights”.
“Collectively, we, as rights-holders in various football
competitions, condemn the pirate entity beoutQ, which continues to abuse
the operations of rights holders and legitimate broadcasters through
its persistent and illegal screening of events for which it has made no
effort to secure the rights,” the powerful football bodies said in a
joint statement.
FIFA and the Premier League have previously said they were preparing
to take legal action in Saudi Arabia against the pirates, but Tuesday’s
statement makes no mention of the kingdom.
In October, beIN launched a compensation claim worth $1 billion (880
million euros) against the Saudi piracy channel while Qatar filed an
action at the World Trade Organization.
Saudi Arabia has denied the claims and even said the piracy was operating out of Cuba.
The spat over beoutQ’s actions comes amid a 19-month economic and
diplomatic boycott of Qatar by Saudi Arabia and its allies, who accuse
Doha of backing terrorism and seeking closer ties with rival Iran.
Qatar has refuted the claims.








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