China nixes Arsenal game broadcast after Ozil's Uighur posts

Club distances itself from Muslim player's comments; Weibo users urge further action

Uighur children with placards of Arsenal footballer Mesut Ozil and his Instagram and Twitter posts during a demonstration at Beyazid Square in Istanbul on Saturday. The posts accused Muslims of staying silent over the mistreatment of the Uighur Musli
Uighur children with placards of Arsenal footballer Mesut Ozil and his Instagram and Twitter posts during a demonstration at Beyazid Square in Istanbul on Saturday. The posts accused Muslims of staying silent over the mistreatment of the Uighur Muslim minority in China. PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

LONDON • English Premier League (EPL) team Arsenal Football Club is facing repercussions after one of its star players made critical comments about the treatment of the Uighur Muslim minority in China.

China's state-run CCTV will no longer show a live broadcast of its match against Manchester City this weekend, despite the club's attempt to disassociate itself from the remarks.

Instead, the broadcaster will show a prerecorded EPL game between Tottenham Hotspur and Wolverhampton Wanderers.

This comes months after a National Basketball Association (NBA) general manager's defence of pro-democracy protesters in Hong Kong led to a backlash from China.

Arsenal will now look to see if the comments from player Mesut Ozil will lead to further consequences.

In Instagram and Twitter posts, Ozil accused Muslims of staying silent over the mistreatment of the Uighurs in China, becoming one of the most prominent public figures to condemn Beijing on the issue.

"Qurans are burned. Mosques are closed. Their schools are banned," said the Muslim player, who is often seen praying on the field, "but the Muslim community is silent."

The EPL club responded with a post on Weibo, where it has over five million followers, distancing itself from the player's comments.

"The content published is all Ozil's personal opinion," the team said. "Arsenal, as a football club, has always adhered to the principle of not involving itself in politics."

A number of commenters under the Weibo post said the club needed to take further action, and one user posted an image of an Arsenal jersey emblazoned with Ozil's name cut up with a pair of scissors.

Arsenal may have been attempting to protect itself from any bitter response from China, a country with at least 187 million soccer fans, based on Nielsen estimates.

The club, which also operates a sports bar and restaurant in China, announced plans early this year to expand its chain as it seeks to grow its fan base in the region.

A United Nations assessment said tens of thousands to "upwards of one million" Uighurs have been detained in China, although the government says it is fighting separatism and religious extremism.

China blacked out some American NBA games in October after Houston Rockets general manager Daryl Morey posted a tweet in support of pro-democracy demonstrators in Hong Kong. He later deleted the message, but China took umbrage and the NBA's sponsors in the country cut ties with the American league.

Arsenal's response mirrors the post by the basketball team's billionaire owner Tilman Fertitta.

More recently, Chinese video-sharing app TikTok suspended, and then later restored, the account of a user after she posted viral videos critical of the Chinese government's actions in Xinjiang.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on December 16, 2019, with the headline China nixes Arsenal game broadcast after Ozil's Uighur posts. Subscribe