Bangladeshis voice solidarity as Palestinian squad plays World Cup qualifier in Dhaka

Palestine's starting eleven gather for their national anthem ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup AFC qualifiers football match between Lebanon and Palestine at the Khalid Bin Mohammed Stadium in Sharjah on Nov, 16, 2023. (AFP)
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Updated 24 March 2024
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Bangladeshis voice solidarity as Palestinian squad plays World Cup qualifier in Dhaka

  • Palestinian football team will play a match against Bangladesh on Tuesday
  • Presence of Palestine squad at World Cup qualifier can help raise awareness, fans say

 

DHAKA: Bangladeshis voiced on Sunday their solidarity with the Palestinian football team ahead of a World Cup qualifier match in Dhaka. 

Football is one of the most popular sports in Bangladesh, with passionate fans from the South Asian country often making international headlines for their enthusiasm, especially during the World Cup. 

The nation’s love for football will again be demonstrated on Tuesday, when Bangladesh’s national team plays a second World Cup qualifier match against the Palestinian squad at the Bashundhara Kings Arena. 

The Palestinian football team, which was recognized as a full member by the sport’s governing body FIFA in 1998, won 5-0 on Thursday in the first of two qualifiers against Bangladesh. 

Though Bangladeshis will support the home team during the upcoming match, their solidarity with Palestine amid Israel’s war on Gaza will also be unwavering. 

“When it’s sports on the field, undoubtedly the audience will support their home team. It’s very natural … (but) the people of Bangladesh are always with our Palestinian brothers and sisters,” Satyajit Das Rupu, an executive committee member of the Bangladesh Football Federation, told Arab News. 

Since the beginning of the Israeli onslaught on the Gaza Strip in early October, the Bangladeshi government has repeatedly denounced the bombardments while its citizens have shown solidarity through protests and initiatives to raise awareness about the ongoing Israeli attacks on the besieged enclave. 

“I hope the aggression against the Palestinians will come to an end soon. World leaders should act immediately and decisively in this regard without any delay. By this time, we have seen enough atrocities in Gaza,” Rupu said. 

For Sonia Ahmed, a 37-year-old homemaker in Dhaka, the upcoming World Cup qualifier match in Dhaka is a reminder of how football “connects everyone” from around the globe. 

“The Palestinian football team will play on the soil of Bangladesh. It’s a rare opportunity for the Muslims of this country to express their solidarity with the Palestinians, especially when they (Palestinians) are facing the highest level of atrocities committed by the occupying Israeli forces during this holy month of Ramadan,” Ahmed told Arab News. 

She said the Palestinian team’s presence at the qualifier is a way of raising awareness about Israel’s war on Gaza, which has killed over 32,200 Palestinians.  

“Amid this war, the Palestinian football team is announcing their presence to the international community with the language of football. It’s a unique way of protesting against the inaction of the world, which has failed to stop the Israeli aggression. I salute this Palestinian spirit.” 

Like most Bangladeshis, Bashar Hossain will be cheering for the national team to win the qualifier match. But he also remains steadfast in his support for Palestinian freedom. 

The Bangladeshi people have always supported the Palestinian cause, Hossain told Arab News.

The international community, he added, is not doing enough to bring Israel’s oppression of Palestine to an end. 

“I think, the most popular sport of the world — football — brought us an opportunity to remind the people about the ongoing sufferings of the Palestinians … It’s amazing to observe the resilience of the Palestinian football team amid this ongoing war,” he said. 

“I think Palestinian footballers are now playing on the ground with double the spirit to show the world how indomitable they are.” 


Lando Norris crowned Formula One world champion

Updated 3 sec ago
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Lando Norris crowned Formula One world champion

ABU DHABI: Lando Norris claimed his maiden Formula One world drivers’ title in Abu Dhabi on Sunday, ending Max Verstappen’s four-year reign.
The Briton finished third in the season-closer behind race winner Verstappen and the other title challenger, McLaren teammate Oscar Piastri, to claim the crown by two points.
Norris, in tears on the team radio, said: “Thanks so much. I love you mum, I love you dad.”
“That was exciting, a little too exciting, awesome,” said McLaren team principal Zak Brown.
Norris becomes Britain’s first world champion since Lewis Hamilton in 2020 with this 13th drivers’ crown for McLaren.
The 26-year-old’s success comes over half a century after Emerson Fittipaldi claimed the British marque’s first drivers’ title in 1974.
A galaxy of F1 greats followed — James Hunt (1976), Niki Lauda (1984), Alain Prost (1985, 1986, 1989), Ayrton Senna (1988, 1990, 1991), Mikka Hakkinen (1998, 1999) and Hamilton in 2008.
McLaren, headed by team principal Andrea Stella and CEO Brown, secured back-to-back constructors’ titles in Singapore last month.
Sunday’s season-closer was the first time the title was decided by a contest involving more than two drivers since a four-way scrap at the final race in Abu Dhabi in 2010.