WWE’s Saudi Arabia Show to Go On Despite Journalist’s Disappearance and the Country’s Human Rights Violations
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The disappearance of Jamal Khashoggi has severely damaged Saudi Arabia’s reputation this week, but WWE’s next big money Saudi show is still on track for early November. Khashoggi, a Saudi-born journalist for the Guardian and the Washington Post who fled to America after criticizing his home country, hasn’t been seen since Oct. 2. His last known whereabouts were the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, and the Turkish government claims to have audio and video evidence that Khashoggi was tortured and executed there by Saudi operatives. It’s an explosive charge that has driven a number of Westerners to rethink their business relationships with the Kingdom, but as of now WWE’s Crown Jewel show is still scheduled to run at King Fahd International Stadium in Riyadh on Nov. 2. Today the company released a tepid one-sentence statement about the show. The statement reads, in full: “We are currently monitoring the situation.”
It shouldn’t have taken the disappearance and possible murder of one man for WWE to begin “monitoring” its relationship with Saudi Arabia. By entering into business with the Kingdom WWE is willfully ignoring the country’s despicable human rights record. This is a country that executes gay people and various non-violent offenders, and a country that, since 2015, has injured or killed over 2000 children in Yemen through air strikes on civilian targets. Khashoggi’s disappearance might have brought greater attention to Saudi Arabia’s misdeeds, but the government is guilty of far more than the possible murder of one journalist.
The worst thing isn’t just that WWE does business with Saudi Arabia. It’s that WWE willingly turns itself into a full-fledged propaganda machine for a country with such a brutal track record. WWE’s Greatest Royal Rumble at Jeddah earlier this year was as much of an ad for the country as it was a wrestling show, with WWE announcers regularly praising the country’s new “progressive” outlook. WWE has stacked both of this year’s Saudi Arabian shows with WrestleMania-worthy cards, including the surprising return of Shawn Michaels at Crown Jewel after an eight-year retirement. Saudi Arabia’s Crown Prince is paying WWE a massive amount of money to run these shows, and in return WWE is willingly and shamefully whitewashing the country’s human rights record while treating the country to the company’s biggest shows of the year. WWE will promote the country however the Crown Prince wishes, even if it directly contradicts how the Saudi Arabian government actually acts.