Is there nothing Sadiq Kahn Mayor of London will not do to mess up investments in London and bring it down?

Graham Charles Lear
3 min readNov 26, 2022

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London’s transport authority banned Qatar tourism ads due to the Gulf state’s anti-LGBTQ laws. A spokesperson for Qatar accused London’s city’s mayor of “virtue signalling” for political points during the World Cup.

Qatar says it will review its “current and future” investments in London after tourism advertisements for the Gulf country were banned over the World Cup host’s laws against homosexuality, UK media reported Saturday.

The ads were due to run on the London Underground, the city’s subway also known as the “Tube,” as well as on buses during the soccer tournament.

Qatar is one of the biggest investors in the UK capital through its sovereign wealth fund.

How did Qatar reportedly respond to the ban?

The ban by Transport for London (TfL), the UK capital’s public transport authority, “has been interpreted as a message from the mayor’s office that Qatari business is not welcome in London,” the Financial Times cited a spokesperson for Qatar as saying.

The spokesperson told the FT said Qatar was now reviewing its “current and future investments” in the city.

Why did London ban the ads?

In 2019, London Mayor Sadiq Khan ordered that ads that reference countries identified as having the death penalty for same-sex sexual acts are referred to the transport regulator to have their suitability to feature on trains, buses and other sites reviewed.

Qatar is among 11 states listed as having “effective” or “probable” death penalty policies for sexual relations between same-sex partners, along with regional neighbours like Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.

According to Human Rights Watch, the country’s laws against homosexuality include jail or the death penalty for same-sex relations and many LGBTQ people are ill-treated upon arrest.

A TfL spokesperson said any advertising campaign related to countries with homophobic laws in place “continues to be reviewed on a case-by-case basis.”

“Advertising which promotes travel to Qatar, tourism in Qatar, or portrays Qatar as a desirable destination will not be considered acceptable at this time,” TfL noted, including those encouraging visiting for the World Cup.

Other ads promoting watching the tournament on TV or streaming services are likely to be accepted, the transport authority said.

TfL contacted Q22, the body overseeing the World Cup, and Qatar’s tourism authority this week to inform them of the ban.

How big are Qatar’s investments in London?

The Qatar Investment Authority, the country’s $445 billion (€427 billion) sovereign wealth fund, has spent lavishly and snapped up some of Britain’s best-known landmarks and businesses, including the luxury store Harrods, the Shard skyscraper and Canary Wharf.

The Gulf state also owns the Savoy and Grosvenor House hotels, a 20% stake in Heathrow Airport and a 14% stake in Sainsbury’s, Britain’s second-biggest supermarket group.

Qatar feels the heat

Qatar has received criticism from rights groups over the abuse of migrant workers building new stadiums for the tournament. Thousands of people died during the nearly 12 years of construction and preparations for the games.

The captains of several national teams had planned to wear rainbow armbands in support of LGBTQ rights but changed their minds after FIFA threatened to issue yellow cards and possible match bans to players.

mm/ar (AFP, Reuters)

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Graham Charles Lear

What is life without a little controversy in it? Quite boring and sterile would be my answer.