Over 100 professional female footballers have united in a letter urging FIFA to terminate its sponsorship agreement with the state-owned Saudi Arabian oil company Aramco, citing the country’s “brutal human rights violations.
”The four-year partnership, established in April, will see Aramco, which is 98.5% state-owned, sponsor major events, including the men’s World Cup in 2026 and the Women’s World Cup in 2027. Critics argue that Saudi Arabia is engaging in “sportswashing,” attempting to improve its image through investments in sports while obscuring its dismal human rights record.
Recently, the Saudi regime has imposed lengthy prison sentences on several women after secret trials, targeting those who advocated for women’s rights on social media.
In their letter published on Monday, the athletes emphasized that young girls, who will become future players, deserve far better from the sport’s governing body than its “allyship with this nightmare sponsor.
”The signatories stated: “Saudi authorities have been spending billions in sports sponsorship to try to distract from the regime’s brutal human rights reputation, but its treatment of women speaks for itself.
“It is because we stand alongside the citizens of Saudi Arabia whose human rights are violated that we are speaking out. We don’t want to be part of covering up these violations.
“We urge FIFA to reconsider this partnership and replace Saudi Aramco with alternative sponsors whose values align with gender equality, human rights, and the safe future of our planet.
“A corporation that bears glaring responsibility for the climate crisis, owned by a state that criminalizes LGBTQ+ individuals and systematically oppresses women, has no place sponsoring our beautiful game.”
Fenerbahce coach Jose Mourinho voiced his frustration with local journalists on Sunday after his team fell further behind Super Lig leaders Galatasaray, stating that he is "always" questioned about players who aren’t in the lineup.
Fenerbahce settled for a 2-2 draw against Samsunspor in a match that saw them concede a late equalizer.
In response to a reporter's inquiry about why certain players were not participating, Mourinho, who took over as Fenerbahce's head coach this summer, said after the match, "I'm starting to learn what Turkey is. I'm surprised that you don't ask why goalkeeper Irfan [Can Eğribayat] doesn't play, I'm surprised that you don't ask about [forward] Cenk Tosun; I'm surprised because you always ask about the players that don't play.
"For me, [Dušan] Tadić has been our best player for some matches, not because he scores important goals, but because of the balance he brings to the team, because of the organization he has in his brain, because he doesn't make positional or decision-making mistakes. If you don't want me to play him, and play somebody who isn't playingmuch, okay.
"Serbian forward Tadić started the match and netted his fifth league goal of the season. He has also tallied four assists in eight league games thus far.
"It's difficult for me to give more reasons because I don't want to analyze my players publicly," Mourinho explained. "I have to protect players and not open up too much about the reasons why this one plays and not the other.
"I understand it is your culture ... You are crying every week for me to play [midfielder] Irfan Kahveci [who came on as a substitute on Sunday] ... sometimes players that you think are phenomenal players, they are not. Sometimes they make critical mistakes that impact the team."