Skip to content
  • Image
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Podcasts
  • Email
  • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
  • Contact
The Arab Daily News

The Arab Daily News

Original news, features, opinions from Chicago to Jerusalem

  • About
    • About
    • Our Writers
    • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
    • Book Store
    • Contact
    • Submit Book Reviews, Press Releases
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Corrections Policy
    • Profile on Ray Hanania
    • Submit Press Release
  • Features
    • Food
    • Book Review
    • Humor
    • Movies
    • Travel
  • Arab US Community
    • Arab Stores Targeted
    • Arab Community Network Page
    • Arab Heritage America resources
    • Directory
      • Groups & Organizations
      • Mosques, Churches
      • Restaurants
      • 2008 & 2014 Arab Media Directories
    • National Arab Heritage Month
    • Video: Chicago Arab History
    • Video: Photo Array of Chicago Arabs
    • Overview of Arabs in America
    • Hanania standup comedy
    • Arabs on the Titanic
    • Obituaries
  • Podcasts
    • Ray Hanania on Politics Podcast
    • Arab News Ray Hanania Radio
    • Arab Radio Podcast intro
    • Radio Baladi Detroit
    • TwoGuys on Politics
  • Ray on Tiktok
  • Subscribe Ray’s Columns
  • Archive 2004-2013
  • Toggle search form
  • Jim Zogby and Rev Jesse L. Jackson in 2020. Photo courtesy of AAI
    Washington Report on Middle East Affairs memorializes passing of Rev. Jesse L. Jackson Activism
  • Joey Ruzevich Democrat candidate 6th Congressional District
    Ruzevich slams Casten’s support of Genocide in Palestine Activism
  • No Azure for Apartheid
    Microsoft workers and allies mark start of Return to Office with protests and call to cut ties with Israel’s government Activism
  • Nick Uniejewski candidate for Illinois senate
    Uniejewski Campaign Launches Second Digital Ad in 6th District State Senate race Election
  • Bushra Amiwala Wikipedia
    Bushra Amiwala Calls Out Dark Money, ICE Unaccountability in FOX Televised Debate Election
  • 02-24-26 IMAN endorses Kat Abughazaleh
    ILMAN and IMPAC Announce Endorsement of Kat Abughazaleh for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District American Arabs
  • Zakat Foundation of America Logo
    Zakat Foundation of America launches annual Ramadan Humanitarian Campaign American Arabs
  • Congress members rally behind Delia Ramirez “Block the Bombs” act proposal Activism
  • John Harrell Candidate 8th Illinois House District
    Arab and Muslim Americans rally for 8th Illinois House District candidate John Harrell Activism
  • Ex- Al Qaida Fighter: Al Qaida plans to attack the US on September 11 were public, CIA did noting to stop it Ali Younes
  • Armed attack Inside the Jordanian Department of Intelligence, baffles Jordanians Ali Younes
  • 02-12-26 Ray Hanania on Marc SIms Podcast
    Ray Hanania joins Marc Sims podcast on censorship, Bad Bunny and racism Activism
  • Benjamin Netanyahu
    Adalah: Deportation Orders against Palestinian Citizens of Israel Violate Fundamental Human Rights, International Law Arab World
  • Benjamin Netanyahu
    Senators Shaheen, Reed, Warner, Murray, Durbin, Schumer, Coons and Schatz Urge President Trump to Oppose Israeli Settlement Expansion in the West Bank Christian & Muslim
  • Arab Center speakers Feb. 10 2026 Survey
    Arab Center of Washington DC to release survey on Arab Public Opinion and Implications for Trump’s Policies in the Region Arab Center Washington DC

A testimony to failed autocracies: Eritrean soccer team defects

Posted on October 16, 2015 By James Dorsey No Comments on A testimony to failed autocracies: Eritrean soccer team defects
SHARE ...
          
 
  

  • Tweet





Click here to subscribe FREE to Ray Hanania's Columns

By James M. Dorsey

Eritrea’s national team has for all practical purposes defected after 10 of its players this week refused to return home following a World Cup qualifier in Botswana.

The defection and effective demise of the squad underscored the failure of autocratic rule in Eritrea already highlighted by the large contingent of Eritreans among the hundreds of thousands of refugees washing ashore in Europe.

It also threw a spotlight on differing degrees of repression in failed autocracies and the way people deal with it. The defecting Eritrean players clearly felt they could afford to seek asylum without repercussions for family members left behind, a luxury Syrian players, for example, do not enjoy.

In seeking asylum in Botswana, the players joined a long list of athletes who have left Eritrea against the backdrop of United Nations assertions that government policies amount to slavery and crimes against humanity and that torture was widespread.

The players reinforced the political statement embedded in their defection by appointing the exile Eritrean Movement for Democracy and Human Rights (EMDHR) as their spokesperson.

Eritrean soccer like Syrian football has been leaking players, who are among the privileged few allowed to travel abroad, for years. As a result, the Eritrean team has had to rebuild from scratch several times.

Rebuilding the team is facilitated by the fact that Eritreans are enlisted for indefinite periods of time into national service. Eritrea has denied assertions in a 484-page UN report that it subjects its citizens to indefinite national service or kills people trying to flee the country.

While the Eritreans have often defected in groups, Syrians have either left their country individually without turning their escape into a media event to protect relatives left behind or in the cases of those players with dual nationality who lived abroad before the eruption of the civil war in 2011 quietly refused to play for what they saw as the team of President Bashar al-Assad rather than that of a nation that only still exists on paper.

The Eritrean defections are a blow to the government’s prestige in a country that according to a 2009 US embassy cable disclosed by Wikileaks is “mad about soccer.” The cable noted that “senior government and party officials are avid fans of the British Premier League and sometimes leave official functions early to catch key matches.”

Twelve members of the national soccer team disappeared in Kenya in 2009 during a regional tournament. Another 13 players sought asylum in Tanzania in 2011. A year later, the reconstituted 17-member national team defected en masse together with their doctor while in Uganda. Four other Eritrean athletes requested political asylum in Britain after the 2012 London Olympics.

EMDHR spokesman Dick Bayford, a Botswanan human rights lawyer, told reporters that the most recent defecting players were still doing national service and risked being charged with desertion which is punishable by death if they were forced to return to Eritrea.

Pro-government media denied Mr. Bayford’s statement and asserted that the Eritrean team dispatched to Botswana had 34 members, 24 of which had returned to Eritrea.

Writing in Tesfanews, Mike Seium charged that EMDHR “seem(s) to think that because 10 players defected the country is in uproar and we have serious problems. However, they don’t know Eritrea…The nucleus of the team is still there along with many other players. To those that defected, the sad part of it is that you are using the Eritrean national team to send a political agenda that allows failed organizations like the EMDHR to gain propaganda points.”

While Eritrea ranks among the world’s most repressive nations, Syria hosts one of the world’s most vicious regimes, which explains why Syrian players when they choose to defect do so quietly.

As a result, Syria has largely been able despite multiple defections to keep its national team intact. Surprisingly, the team is performing well on the pitch and despite the mayhem and bloodshed closer to reaching the 2018 World Cup finals than it ever has been.

The stories of individual players nevertheless reflect Syria’s crisis. Mosab Balhous, the Syrian team’s goalkeeper, was arrested in 2011 on charges of supporting opposition movements and sheltering rebel fighters, and vanished for a year before suddenly re-joining the squad in 2012. The national youth team’s folk-singing goalkeeper Abdel Basset Al-Saroot became a leader of the uprising in Homs before initially joining the Islamic State (IS), which he left last year to join Al-Qaeda’s Syrian affiliate, Jabhat al-Nusra.

Swedish-Assyrian international Louay Chanko opted out of the Syrian team because of what he called “corruption.” Striker Firas al-Khatib, who plays for Kuwait’s Al-Arabi SC, left the national team in 2012 because he did not want to represent the Assad government. The departure for Germany of youth team captain Mohammad Jaddoua prompted the Syrian Football Association (SFA) to ban players from traveling abroad except for on official business.

Other players have joined a team in Lebanon fielded by the U.S.-backed Free Syrian Army that hopes to one day be Syria’s national team. It sports green jerseys, the colour of the anti-Assad revolt as opposed to the national squad’s red. The team’s coach, Walid al-Muhaidi, says he escaped Syria in 2013 together with some 100 athletes.

Syrian national team captain Abdulrazak Al Husein told The Guardian in advance of a qualifying match earlier this month against Japan said his squad represented “all aspects of Syria. Whether you are a Christian or a Muslim or any sector of Islam we’re all one family, we’re playing for one team, one country,”

His professed optimism put a brave face on a bad situation. “At the end of the day, we’re playing for the country, hoping it will get back to the way it was. The best thing we can do is unite the people of Syria,” he said.

Mr. Al-Hussein’s optimism is all the more remarkable given that unlike Eritrea which toils under repression but is not threatened by disintegration of its nation state, restoring Syria to its pre-2011 colonial borders is at best a distant dream.

Few believe that Syria can be restored as a nation state within its pre-conflict borders. Russian intervention is widely seen as an effort to ensure that Mr. Assad controls a swath of land stretching from Damascus to Latakia on the Mediterranean coast that could constitute a rump state built around his Alawite minority — one of several entities that could emerge from the ruins of Syria.

Using options, they have which are far less available to their Syrian counterparts, Eritrean players have with their repeated mass defections been doing what FIFA and other international sports associations should have long done: penalize regimes that blatantly violate human rights and use soccer to distract international attention and polish their badly tarnished images.

James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer blog and a forthcoming book with the same title.





Click here to subscribe FREE to Ray Hanania's Columns

  • About
  • Latest Posts
James Dorsey
Follow Me
James Dorsey
James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies as Nanyang Technological University in Singapore, co-director of the Institute of Fan Culture of the University of Würzburg and the author of the blog, The Turbulent World of Middle East Soccer, and a forthcoming book with the same title.
James Dorsey
Follow Me
Latest posts by James Dorsey (see all)
  • Soccer highlights domestic drivers in Saudi-Iranian dispute - January 4, 2016
  • Soccer: Iranian moderates and hardliner lock horns on the pitch - December 29, 2015
  • Trade unions test Qatari sincerity with demands for labour reform - December 20, 2015
NVP: 107

  • Tweet

SHARE ...
          
 
  
 
          
 
 Tweet 
Arab World

Post navigation

Previous Post: removed
Next Post: Palestinians face off with Israeli soldier violence in Gaza

Related Posts

  • EU ban on settlement goods a moral necessity Arab World
  • The Struggle for Social and Economic Justice in France Abdennour Toumi
  • Children celebrate Ramadan Eid in Gaza with food vendor. Photo courtesy of Mohammed Asad
    Palestinian children celebrate Ramadan Eid in besieged Gaza Strip Arab World
  • Promotional picture from the film "Watani: My Homeland" nominated for an Oscar in 2017
    Plight of Syrians competes for Oscar Arab World
  • (Photo courtesy of Salwa Salem-Copty)
    Israel blocks Christians from visiting grave sites Arab World
  • Prosecute Saudis, then prosecute US Soldiers, too American Arabs

More Related Articles

Israeli leaders who challenge Israel’s extremists Arab World
Eid al Adha holiday to be observed on Sept. 11 Arab World
Gaza schools in shambles as children return Arab World
Stuffed Grape Leaves. Photo courtesy of Ray Hanania Middle East Recipes: Stuffed Grape Leaves American Arabs
Moderate Arab World mourns loss of Saudi King Abdullah Arab World
Pictures of the day of the funeral of Martyr Mohammed Majid Bakr, 25, who was shot yesterday by the Israeli occupation during his work as a fisherman in the sea of ​​Gaza City Photography- Ahmed Hasaballah.jpg Photos of Gaza fisherman murdered by Israel Ahmad Hasaballah

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • OPINION COLUMNS
  • 02-12-26 Ray Hanania on Marc SIms Podcast
    Ray Hanania joins Marc Sims podcast on censorship, Bad Bunny and racism
    February 12, 2026
  • Arab Center Washington DC
    Arab Center Analysis: Israel’s declining support among American Evangelicals 
    January 1, 2026
  • Akram Baker
    Akram Baker remembered, worked at Orient House in Jerusalem with the late Faisal Husseini
    December 12, 2025
  • 10-01-25 Arab Center Web Ad 300x300
    The CMCC and the US-Israel Alliance: Collusion or Enforcement Mechanism?
    December 5, 2025
  • Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
    Construction in the E1 Area: Preventing Palestinian Geographical Contiguity
    October 27, 2025

Couyrageous Thought: Hanania Syndicated Columns

Ray Hanania courageous Thought website logo
Ray Hanania

Enter Your Email to Subscribe to Ray Hanania’s Columns

Creative Commons License
All work on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Do not edit original work. Give credit to the original source.

The Lightning Strike Radio Sun 8-10 AM

Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show
Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show
  • NEWS
  • Jim Zogby and Rev Jesse L. Jackson in 2020. Photo courtesy of AAI
    Washington Report on Middle East Affairs memorializes passing of Rev. Jesse L. Jackson
    February 26, 2026
  • Joey Ruzevich Democrat candidate 6th Congressional District
    Ruzevich slams Casten’s support of Genocide in Palestine
    February 26, 2026
  • No Azure for Apartheid
    Microsoft workers and allies mark start of Return to Office with protests and call to cut ties with Israel’s government
    February 26, 2026
  • Nick Uniejewski candidate for Illinois senate
    Uniejewski Campaign Launches Second Digital Ad in 6th District State Senate race
    February 26, 2026
  • Bushra Amiwala Wikipedia
    Bushra Amiwala Calls Out Dark Money, ICE Unaccountability in FOX Televised Debate
    February 26, 2026
  • New-iTunes-1400-x-1400-The-Ray-Hanania-Show-Podcast-Icon-300-x-300.jpg
  • powerpr300x300ad.jpg
  • Podcast-iTunes-Logo-Chi-City-Hall-1985.jpg
  • The-Kings-Pawn-Book-300-x-300.png
  • terroristbookcover-300-x-300.jpg
  • NEWSWIRE
  • Jim Zogby and Rev Jesse L. Jackson in 2020. Photo courtesy of AAI
    Washington Report on Middle East Affairs memorializes passing of Rev. Jesse L. Jackson
    February 26, 2026
  • Joey Ruzevich Democrat candidate 6th Congressional District
    Ruzevich slams Casten’s support of Genocide in Palestine
    February 26, 2026
  • 02-24-26 IMAN endorses Kat Abughazaleh
    ILMAN and IMPAC Announce Endorsement of Kat Abughazaleh for Illinois’ 9th Congressional District
    February 24, 2026
  • Zakat Foundation of America Logo
    Zakat Foundation of America launches annual Ramadan Humanitarian Campaign
    February 23, 2026

Follow Ray Hanania at
Twitter
Facebook
TitkTok
BlueSky
RayHanania Columns

Click here to get information on The Ray Hanania Radio Show and its podcasts

Copyright © 2026 The Arab Daily News.

Powered by PressBook Premium theme