Pep Guardiola is a paradox: the humanitarian who won’t criticise Abu Dhabi
Pep Guardiola unmoored is a beautiful thing, raising in some the idea that his emotional outpouring over the innocent victims of global conflicts could point to a premature parting with Manchester City at the end of the season.
When the influential and powerful raise their voice, commotion ripples through the ether. Goodness knows the downtrodden need all the help they can get.
With Pep on their side, the people of Gaza, Ukraine and Sudan, anti-government protestors in the United States, all referenced in Guardiola’s remarkable press conference about a football match, are at least seen, their complaints heard, their anguish acknowledged.
“Never, ever in the history of humanity have we had the information in front of our eyes more clearly than now. The genocide in Palestine, what happened in Ukraine, what happened in Russia, what happened all around the world, in Sudan, everywhere. Do you want to see it? It’s our problem as human beings,” he said.
“Is there someone here who is not affected every single day? For me, it hurts me. If it was the opposite side, it would hurt me. Killing thousands of innocent people, it hurts me. It’s no more complicated than that. I have a lot of friends from many, many countries, but when you have an idea and you need to defend, and you have to kill thousands of people, I’m sorry, I will stand up.”
Well said, Pep. However, speaking up in this way also raises the spectre of justifiable whataboutery, so forgive me if I highlight the contradictions here, and there are many.
Were Guardiola to have spoken out in Abu Dhabi, home of City’s ownership, as he did before the Carabao Cup semi-final, for example, he might have been subject to criminal investigation and likely expulsion.
A cursory glance at Amnesty International’s commentary reveals how freedom of expression is curtailed by the heavy-duty application of the United Arab Emirates’ legal apparatus. For example, a Palestinian academic was deported in April last year after sharing his political views with colleagues at New York University’s Abu Dhabi campus.
The following month a foreign student was arrested and deported for shouting “Free Palestine” at an NYU graduation ceremony.
You can imagine how Pep’s volley at the Etihad might have been perceived by City chairman Khaldoon Al Mubarak, the UAE representative no less on Donald Trump’s questionable vanity project launched in Davos last month, the fantastical “Board of Peace”.
Al Mubarak has already been pinned by the Jewish Representative Council over Guardiola’s remarks at a charity concert he addressed in Barcelona last month wearing the keffiyeh scarf, the universal symbol of Palestinian resistance.
Moreover, the UAE is involved in the conflict in Sudan as a significant backer of the rebel paramilitary group RSF (Rapid Support Forces), which for two years has been locked in a deadly power battle with the ruling SAF (Sudan Armed Forces). The latter accuses the UAE of being complicit in genocide, which if course the UAE, a heavy importer of the gold controlled by the RSF, rejects.
Separating right from wrong in complex, internecine struggles rooted not in principles but power and control is the devil’s own work. It is perhaps as well that Guardiola made no mention of Yemen, where, as a supporter of the separatist group STC (Southern Transactional Council), the UAE had boots on the ground until 2019 and has since maintained proxy support in a brutal civil war that has ravaged communities.
Guardiola cannot be held accountable for the foreign policy of his club’s owners, but if his heart strings are sufficiently plucked by interminable conflicts that claim innocent lives he might do well to peer through the emotional mist to establish a clearer understanding of global events and the forces involved.
Or, as some are suggesting, it might be that Guardiola does not care, that he has gone nuclear knowing that the end is nigh, that his departure is decided and he has nothing to lose. Guardiola will know the power of his voice, how anything he says is grist to the social media mill and open to wild interpretation.
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How’s this for an hysterical link? Guardiola has been resolute in his support for the Abu Dhabi ownership in the case brought by the Premier League against Manchester City, which resulted in 130 charges relating to alleged financial irregularities, all denied by the club.
We still await the outcome of a hearing that convened for two months at the end of 2024. Perhaps Guardiola knows something we don’t. The question will be asked.
Either way the needle has been moved. Pep has spoken and is now fair game having entered the same geopolitical realm that saw Abu Dhabi buy City in the first place, not for the connection to east Manchester, nor for the love of football, but for the soft power clout that association with the world game brings.
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