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Qatar Market Anticipates World Cup Business Boom


FILE - People walk at Souq Waqif market in Doha, Qatar, June 9, 2017.
FILE - People walk at Souq Waqif market in Doha, Qatar, June 9, 2017.

Boxloads of wooden camels, plates with pictures of Qatar's skyscrapers, gold necklaces and football hats and scarves arrive every day in Doha's Souq Waqif market, where traders eagerly await World Cup fans.

The century-old market will be a magnet for the one million football followers expected at the tournament, which kicks off on November 20.

"There will be huge crowds, we have never experienced anything like this," said Abdul Rahman Mohammed Al-Nama, head of the souq stables that organizes camel and pony rides. "Inshallah (God willing), we are ready."

Crowds are already growing as a World Cup buzz mounts.

Fan zone attractions and temporary stores are being set up and the hundreds of small stores selling incense, spices, carpets, gold and even animals. Some aisles at the market are filled with scarves, flags and hats emblazoned with the names of the 32 competing nations.

Press reports said stores will be allowed to open 24 hours a day during the World Cup.

Foreign fans "will have a lot of fun", said Yasmine Ghanem, a 28-year-old member of Qatar's national women's golf team, who was sat in a Souq Waqif cafe drinking coffee and eating pancakes. "It will be a great mixture of Arab culture and football," she added.

Every evening, terraces are now filled with people drinking coffee and puffing on shisha tobacco pipes — it is a zone with no alcohol. But traders, who have long been preparing for the World Cup, are expecting more.

Tens of billions of dollars have been spent on a new metro and infrastructure that has given the city a dramatic makeover with many new resorts also built.

The nation wants to use the World Cup to bolster a campaign to increase visitor numbers from 1.5 million a year to six million by 2030.

Qatar Airways chief executive Akbar Al Baker said his company is investing "hundreds of millions of dollars" on new infrastructure and promoting tourism.

"The World Cup will just amplify and maximize the changing perception that people may currently have about Doha and Qatar,” said Kamilla Swart-Arries, associate professor in sport and tourism at Hamad bin Khalifa University.

At the World Cup countdown clock on seafront Corniche road, Bangladeshis, Indians, Nepalis, Pakistanis, Kenyans and Ugandans from Qatar's huge migrant community flock to take selfies next to the modernist structure.

"I am a fan of Lionel Messi and I have a ticket to see Argentina play Saudi Arabia," said Anwar Sadath, 56, an Indian accountant."It will be a memorable event."

When Souq Waqif opened in the early 20th century, traders stood at the entrance shouting at passers-by to buy their goods. Its name means the "standing market."

Devastated by a major fire in 2003, most of it has been rebuilt with arched pedestrian alleys as part of a project to regenerate central Doha.

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