Juventus and Milan are being urged by human-rights campaigners not to play the Supercoppa in Saudi Arabia following the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.

Amnesty International said that if the clubs go ahead with the fixture in January, it will only help Riyadh to use sport to ‘rebrand’ its tarnished image, known as ‘sportswashing’.

Serie A bosses signed a €7m deal in June for the Supercoppa to be played in Saudi Arabia over three of the next five years.

Juventus and Milan are being urged by human-rights campaigners not to play the Supercoppa in Saudi Arabia following the murder of Jamal Khashoggi.

Amnesty International said that if the clubs go ahead with the fixture in January, it will only help Riyadh to use sport to ‘rebrand’ its tarnished image, known as ‘sportswashing’.

Serie A bosses signed a €7m deal in June for the Supercoppa to be played in Saudi Arabia over three of the next five years.

The first fixture in January will be between League winners Juventus and Coppa Italia finalists, Milan. Previous Supercoppas have been held in the US, China, Libya and Qatar.

But the international outcry over the savage killing of Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate earlier this month has led to calls for big sporting events in the desert kingdom to be boycotted.

The world’s top two tennis players, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, are already under pressure to pull out of a lucrative exhibition match in Saudi Arabia next month.

Both players took to Twitter in the days just after Khashoggi disappeared to thank the authorities for the invitation to visit the ‘beautiful country’ just before Christmas – but this was before the full gruesome details of what had happened to Khashoggi had emerged.

Outrage over the killing later led to more than 40 high-profile organisations to pull out of this week’s Saudi investment conference, dubbed ‘Davos in the Desert’.

In a hard-hitting statement, Amnesty International UK’s head of policy and government affairs, Allan Hogarth, said of the Supercoppa plan today: “It’s clear that countries like Saudi Arabia are well aware of the potential for sport to subtlety ‘rebrand’ a country.

“Even before the horrific killing of Jamal Khashoggi, Saudi Arabia had a truly appalling human rights record. Big clubs like Juventus and Milan need to understand that their participation in sporting events in the country could be used as a form of ‘sportswashing’.

“We’d urge these Italian clubs to think twice about the signal this sends out to sports fans across the world and the brave activists who stand up for human rights in Saudi Arabia.”

If they do decide to go ahead with their match, Nadal and Djokovic have been urged to use the visit to highlight human rights abuses which are going on in Saudi.

“It’s up to Nadal and Djokovic where they play their lucrative exhibition matches, but if they go to Jeddah we’d like to see them using their profiles to raise human rights issues,” said Mr Hogarth.

“Tweeting support for Saudi Arabia’s brave human rights defenders would be a start.”

Around 15 women’s rights activists, including a friend of the Duchess of Sussex, Loujain al-Hathloul, face 25 years in jail for speaking out on the need for more reforms.

AC Milan referred calls to Supercoppa organisers, Serie A, who declined to comment.

Words: Anthony Harwood

Image credit @gsaksa_en via Twitter

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