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Red lines, high stakes for Brand France in conservative Gulf

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French brands have long enjoyed prestige in the Gulf, but the country's clout in the conservative region is in jeopardy amid fury over the French president's defence of cartoons insulting Islam.

Muslims worldwide have protested President Emmanuel Macron's strident defence of secular values and the right to mock religion after a French schoolteacher who showed his class cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed was murdered.

In Saudi Arabia, a Saudi citizen wielding a knife wounded a guard at the French consulate in the Red Sea city of Jeddah on Thursday, while across the Gulf retailers and consumers alike have boycotted French products.

In Kuwait, 60 grocers have stripped French products from shelves and several travel agents have discontinued trips to France.

"We are boycotting French products to deliver an economic message, which is that the Prophet is a red line that cannot be crossed," said Kuwait City store manager Khaled Hussein.

Qatar's Al-Meera, a supermarket chain with a government minister as its chairman, has stopped stocking all French products.

Two official sources told AFP Qatar will boycott the Paris Peace Forum due to be held November 11-13, though the government would not confirm such a decision had been made.

Gerd Nonneman, a professor of Gulf studies at Georgetown University in Qatar, said the long-term impact of the controversy depended on Macron's next steps.

"If Macron continues to double down, then there will indeed be a longer-term reputational effect and probably a modest commercial one as well," he told AFP.

"But that won't be a long-term effect -- as long as Macron finds different language in the next few months."

- 'Restraining their reactions' -

Dozens of prominent French brands are active in the Gulf, including construction companies, retailers and luxury labels like Louis Vuitton, beloved in the wealthy region.

French showpieces in the Gulf include the Louvre Abu Dhabi gallery in the United Arab Emirates, the Jean Nouvel-designed National Museum in the Qatari capital, Doha, and the under-construction Jeddah metro.

France also sells billions of euros worth of military hardware and tech to wealthy Gulf monarchies, showcasing its airforce at the Dubai airshow by filling the sky with a vapour trail in the colours of the French flag.

Across the Gulf retailers and consumers alike have boycotted French products
Across the Gulf retailers and consumers alike have boycotted French products
-, AFP

The UAE and Saudi Arabia have been more muted than Kuwait and Qatar in their criticisms of France in the wake of Macron's comments.

Saudi Arabia is France's largest regional trade partner, with bilateral exchange worth 10 billion euros ($11.7 billion) in 2018, while Paris' economic ties with the UAE were worth 4.5 billion euros, according to the latest French treasury figures.

In both countries, boycott calls were confined to social media.

Riyadh issued a statement criticising "offensive cartoons of the Prophet", but Royal United Services Institute associate fellow Michael Stephens said there was no concrete action from the kingdom.

"The UAE and Saudi Arabia have allowed a gentle criticism from their clerical establishment, but there has been no pushback at all from the government," he said.

European Council on Foreign Relations Research fellow Cinzia Bianco said the UAE was "restraining their reactions" on the cartoon issue.

"It comes even easier when the target is someone they consider an ally."

H.A. Hellyer, nonresident scholar with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said Gulf countries' actions could also be tempered in the wake of the Jeddah attack and another on the same day in Nice, France, in which a knifeman shouting "Allahu akbar" killed three people.

"After the Nice killings on Thursday, there will be less appetite to criticise France," Hellyer said.

- Don't offend our religion -

Bianco pointed to another way the recent controversy could further jeopardise French relations in the region if it were to drive a wedge between France and Qatar.

A Qatari resident showed AFP an illustrated cheat-sheet of 100 French brands to boycott  including E...
A Qatari resident showed AFP an illustrated cheat-sheet of 100 French brands to boycott, including Evian water and Lacoste clothes
-, AFP

As a result of an embargo imposed on Qatar in 2017, the kingdom has grown closer to Turkey, whose president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has denounced Macron's defence of the cartoon and joined calls for a boycott of French goods.

"France's growing geopolitical hostility (to) Turkey could really harm relations between France and Turkey's closest ally in the Gulf -- Qatar," said Bianco.

For three years, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have boycotted Qatari goods, closed their airspace, and barred entry to Qataris over allegations Doha backs radical Islamist groups and Riyadh's arch-rival Iran -- claims Qatar denies.

In Qatar today, however, the talk of boycotts is focused on France.

One resident showed AFP an illustrated cheat-sheet of 100 French brands to boycott, including Evian water and Lacoste clothes.

"Offending our religion and our Prophet is something that you shouldn't do -- I won't be buying or supporting any French brands," he said.

French brands have long enjoyed prestige in the Gulf, but the country’s clout in the conservative region is in jeopardy amid fury over the French president’s defence of cartoons insulting Islam.

Muslims worldwide have protested President Emmanuel Macron’s strident defence of secular values and the right to mock religion after a French schoolteacher who showed his class cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed was murdered.

In Saudi Arabia, a Saudi citizen wielding a knife wounded a guard at the French consulate in the Red Sea city of Jeddah on Thursday, while across the Gulf retailers and consumers alike have boycotted French products.

In Kuwait, 60 grocers have stripped French products from shelves and several travel agents have discontinued trips to France.

“We are boycotting French products to deliver an economic message, which is that the Prophet is a red line that cannot be crossed,” said Kuwait City store manager Khaled Hussein.

Qatar’s Al-Meera, a supermarket chain with a government minister as its chairman, has stopped stocking all French products.

Two official sources told AFP Qatar will boycott the Paris Peace Forum due to be held November 11-13, though the government would not confirm such a decision had been made.

Gerd Nonneman, a professor of Gulf studies at Georgetown University in Qatar, said the long-term impact of the controversy depended on Macron’s next steps.

“If Macron continues to double down, then there will indeed be a longer-term reputational effect and probably a modest commercial one as well,” he told AFP.

“But that won’t be a long-term effect — as long as Macron finds different language in the next few months.”

– ‘Restraining their reactions’ –

Dozens of prominent French brands are active in the Gulf, including construction companies, retailers and luxury labels like Louis Vuitton, beloved in the wealthy region.

French showpieces in the Gulf include the Louvre Abu Dhabi gallery in the United Arab Emirates, the Jean Nouvel-designed National Museum in the Qatari capital, Doha, and the under-construction Jeddah metro.

France also sells billions of euros worth of military hardware and tech to wealthy Gulf monarchies, showcasing its airforce at the Dubai airshow by filling the sky with a vapour trail in the colours of the French flag.

Across the Gulf retailers and consumers alike have boycotted French products

Across the Gulf retailers and consumers alike have boycotted French products
-, AFP

The UAE and Saudi Arabia have been more muted than Kuwait and Qatar in their criticisms of France in the wake of Macron’s comments.

Saudi Arabia is France’s largest regional trade partner, with bilateral exchange worth 10 billion euros ($11.7 billion) in 2018, while Paris’ economic ties with the UAE were worth 4.5 billion euros, according to the latest French treasury figures.

In both countries, boycott calls were confined to social media.

Riyadh issued a statement criticising “offensive cartoons of the Prophet”, but Royal United Services Institute associate fellow Michael Stephens said there was no concrete action from the kingdom.

“The UAE and Saudi Arabia have allowed a gentle criticism from their clerical establishment, but there has been no pushback at all from the government,” he said.

European Council on Foreign Relations Research fellow Cinzia Bianco said the UAE was “restraining their reactions” on the cartoon issue.

“It comes even easier when the target is someone they consider an ally.”

H.A. Hellyer, nonresident scholar with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, said Gulf countries’ actions could also be tempered in the wake of the Jeddah attack and another on the same day in Nice, France, in which a knifeman shouting “Allahu akbar” killed three people.

“After the Nice killings on Thursday, there will be less appetite to criticise France,” Hellyer said.

– Don’t offend our religion –

Bianco pointed to another way the recent controversy could further jeopardise French relations in the region if it were to drive a wedge between France and Qatar.

A Qatari resident showed AFP an illustrated cheat-sheet of 100 French brands to boycott  including E...

A Qatari resident showed AFP an illustrated cheat-sheet of 100 French brands to boycott, including Evian water and Lacoste clothes
-, AFP

As a result of an embargo imposed on Qatar in 2017, the kingdom has grown closer to Turkey, whose president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has denounced Macron’s defence of the cartoon and joined calls for a boycott of French goods.

“France’s growing geopolitical hostility (to) Turkey could really harm relations between France and Turkey’s closest ally in the Gulf — Qatar,” said Bianco.

For three years, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain have boycotted Qatari goods, closed their airspace, and barred entry to Qataris over allegations Doha backs radical Islamist groups and Riyadh’s arch-rival Iran — claims Qatar denies.

In Qatar today, however, the talk of boycotts is focused on France.

One resident showed AFP an illustrated cheat-sheet of 100 French brands to boycott, including Evian water and Lacoste clothes.

“Offending our religion and our Prophet is something that you shouldn’t do — I won’t be buying or supporting any French brands,” he said.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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