
Shahar Peer is causing quite a bit of controversy over her visa denial to enter the UAE for the Women's tennis tournament. NY Times, unbiased as always, ended a piece by Harvey Araton with,
Tennis should finish its business in the gulf this month, and say bye-bye, Dubai.
Sports are mixed with politics. Sporting contests are an alternative to war. I am not sure how one can imagine the two to all of a sudden not mix. They mix. They mix all the time.
Larry Scott, the chairman and chief executive of the Sony Ericsson WTA Tour, gambled on Dubai. I find it hard to believe that he would have thought the Emirati's would grant a visa to an Israeli on an Israeli passport for a sporting event. High level diplomatic mission.. sure. As long as these visas are not high-profile and not reported in the media, it will happen. So, either Scott is demonstrating incredible naivity or is lying. The UAE is not Qatar. Doha carved a niche out for itself as the political rebel in the GCC. A good by-produt of this is Al Jazeera. The UAE has consistently maintained a conservative political outlook.
Dubai has been getting a lot of bad press in international media lately. Unlike in the past, there don't appear to be a plethora of positive news to offset the bad stuff. While it is understandable in such times, I can't help but feel that whoever is handling the Dubai Inc. communications brief is dropping the ball somewhere. A lot of them.

I'm sure the UAE will let her in as soon as the Israeli government lets the Palestinian Soccer team play matches. Excluding one player for her own safety (which was the cited reason) is no worse than routinely banning 18 soccer players for "security reason".
Yeah, this is not David's star. It just happened to be the picture I found when I googled for her picture.
a real shame..
by the way i dont undertsand the zoom onto the necklace.. its not the jewish star anyway..