It was The Guardian that first had a shit fit in Qatar’s human rights issue.
2013:
How many more must die for Qatar's World Cup?
https://www.theguardian.com/comment...man-rights-sport-cohen?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other
2016:
Human Rights Watch criticises Qatar on changes to its labour law
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....cises-qatar-changes-labour-law-2022-world-cup
2016:
Migrant workers suffer ‘appalling treatment’ in Qatar World Cup stadiums, says Amnesty
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....ment-in-qatar-world-cup-stadiums-says-amnesty
2018:
Qatar migrant workers are still being exploited, says Amnesty report
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....p-workers-still-exploited-says-amnesty-report
2019:
Sudden deaths of hundreds of migrant workers in Qatar not investigated
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....-of-migrant-workers-in-qatar-not-investigated
2019:
Qatar stadium deaths: the dark side of the glittering venue hosting Liverpool
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....side-of-liverpools-glittering-world-cup-venue
2020:
Covid-19 lockdown turns Qatar’s largest migrant camp into ‘virtual prison’
https://www.google.co.uk/amp/s/amp....tars-largest-migrant-camp-into-virtual-prison
——————————
They never stop having a moan although I suppose I should be thankful that it’s in part of their reporting in the West that Qatar ditches the Kafala employment system where one’s employer had to give permission to leave the country etc.
When you say you think The Guardian is acting under instruction, who’s instruction do you believe they’re acting under?
I was referring more to City actually, with the way that Conn made a complete U-turn after writing about the document showing that the Executive Council paid the Etihad sponsorship. It was almost as though someone had screamed at him "You can't write that! It completely demolishes UEFA's case. FFS Conn, what were you thinking? Get out an article condemning City as a human-rights abusing bunch of liars and cheats asap!"
But to answer your point. Yes they criticise Qatar but only ever on migrant worker rights. McGeehan only ever criticised Qatar on migrant workers' rights whereas he criticised the UAE over everything; the fact it was a tribal monarchy, the lack of democracy, press freedom, freedom to criticise the ruling family, women's and LGBT rights, the judicial system, the way it presented a completely different image to the world than the way it behaved domestically, etc.
It seems McGeehan wrote two articles in The Guardian in 2010. He was 2 years away from working for HRW then so he was just a private person living & working in the UAE. So to get the chance to write not just one, but two articles, was interesting in itself.
Here's the first, about the UAE.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/may/18/sex-and-the-city-2-abu-dhabi and it's a full-blown attack on the UAE. And you think "If it's that bad, why live there?"
Then just over 6 months later there's this one on Qatar.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/libertycentral/2010/dec/06/qatar-world-cup-human-rights and it's like "Yeah, there's a bit of a problem with women and LGBT stuff but that's not really important compared to migrant workers".
Now let's be honest here; the UAE & Qatar are almost identical in all those areas covered by human rights. Both are run on Islamic principles although they're much less strict than most. Neither are what we'd call democratic, being run by ruling families, or have a truly independent press or judiciary. Both can be repressive when they want to be and both have an implicit social contract with their citizens that they will get well looked after if they don't rock the boat.
It's not perfect in the way we understand these things but they're both relatively new countries and in a region of the world where there's some serious instability, they're stable albeit imperfect. You and other expats in Qatar and the Gulf have a good life as long as you keep your nose clean and don't do anything stupid. I'm not going to lose my shit over it but I do wonder why there's a somewhat different approach taken in the columns of The Guardian.