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World Cup 2022: tents in desert, no air cons, for fans as Fifa guests hog Qatar’s hotel rooms. An ‘opportunity’ to get an ‘authentic taste of Qatari camping’, official says

  • Qatar has fewer than 30,000 hotel rooms, and most are reserved for guests of Fifa. Football fans invited to stay ‘Bedouin style’ in tents in the desert instead
  • There’ll be utilities but no air conditioning. Luxury tents will be pitched too, and fans can stay on cruise ships and in shared villas – or fly in for matches

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Rustic, Bedouin-style tents will be offered as accommodation for soccer fans during the 2022 World Cup in Qatar. Photo: Qatar’s Supreme Committee for Delivery & Legacy
Agencies

Qatar plans to pitch 1,000 “Bedouin style” tents in the desert for World Cup football fans. The Gulf state hopes to attract 1.2 million visitors, equivalent to nearly half of its population, for the 28-day tournament in November and December.

Bedouin are desert nomads who traditionally live under canvas, and the tents will spring up on the desert landscapes surrounding Doha to offer visitors an authentic taste of Qatari camping, said Omar Al-Jaber, head of accommodation at tournament organiser the Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy.

The tents will be supplied with water and electricity and have drainage systems, but no air conditioning. Qatar is known for extreme summer heat but moderate winters – the weather should be relatively mild when the tournament kicks off on November 21, with average high temperatures around 29 degrees Celsius (85 degrees Fahrenheit).
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“We will give the opportunity for fans to live in a desert,” Al-Jaber said.

The Gulf state hopes to attract 1.2 million visitors for the 28-day tournament in November and December. Photo: Getty Images
The Gulf state hopes to attract 1.2 million visitors for the 28-day tournament in November and December. Photo: Getty Images

A separate camp of 200 tents will be luxurious, commanding “expensive” nightly fees. These will be set up along a beach called the Sealine in the country’s south, on the edge of the desert, with other areas also to be announced, Jaber said.

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Qatar has fewer than 30,000 hotel rooms, according to the most recent estimates by Qatar Tourism, and 80 per cent of them are allocated to guests of Fifa, international football’s governing body, Al-Jaber said.

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