Middle East & Africa | Pitch darkness

Even football has become mired in Lebanon’s political and economic crises

The country is struggling to hold World Cup qualifiers amid power cuts and ruined stadiums

Rivalries, on and off the pitch
|DUBAI

IT SHOULD HAVE been a moment for national excitement. Lebanon has never reached the final stages of the World Cup before, but its national squad has made it to the third round of qualifiers for next year’s tournament in Qatar. Last month they netted a crucial win against Syria. Going into two matches this month, against Iran and the United Arab Emirates (UAE), the Cedars seemed to have a fighting chance of making the play-offs. Instead of revelry, though, the contests offered a reminder of how much has gone wrong in a country mired in political and economic crises.

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline “Pitch darkness”

The triumph of big government

From the November 20th 2021 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

More from Middle East & Africa

illustration featuring three overlapping social media-style photo frames, each depicting different parts of a classic weighing scale

Three big lawsuits against Meta in Kenya may have global implications

One was prompted by the murder of an Ethiopian professor

Iranian demonstrators hold effigies of Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US elect Donald Trump, during an anti-Israeli rally, in Tehran, January 10, 2025

Trump should try to end, not manage, the Middle East’s oldest conflicts

And he should see the region as more than a source of instability and arms deals


illustration of a government building  atop the building, a flag flutters in the wind, displaying the WhatsApp logo

Government by social media in Somalia

Cheap data, social media and creativity are filling in for an absent state


The Gaza ceasefire is stoking violence in the West Bank

Hamas and the Israeli far right both want to destabilise the West Bank

How Turkey plans to expand its influence in the new Syria

Its influence could cause tensions with the Arab world—and Israel

The start of a fragile truce in Gaza offers relief and joy

But the ceasefire is not yet the end of the war