WEST BANK: Saudi's defender Ziyad Al-Sahafi vies for the ball with Palestine's defender Abdelatif Bahdari during the World Cup 2022 Asian qualifying match between Palestine and Saudi Arabia in the town of al-Ram in the Israeli occupied West Bank yesterday. - AFP

RAMALLAH: Saudi
Arabia's football team played Palestine in the occupied West Bank for the first
time yesterday, having previously refused to enter the territory as part of its
boycott of Israel. The two met in a qualifier for the 2022 World Cup at the
Palestinian national stadium in Al-Ram, playing out a 0-0 draw.

Cheered on by a
packed and vociferous home stadium, Palestine frustrated their more prestigious
guests and came close multiple times, but neither side were ultimately able to
make the breakthrough. With significant excitement over the match, all tickets
at the 8,000 stadium were given away free on the day, with thousands in often
disorderly queues to get in. Hundreds of others watched from windows or roofs
of buildings overlooking the stadium, which is only a few metres from the
Israeli barrier that cuts off the West Bank from Jerusalem.

Arab clubs and
national teams have historically refused to play in the Palestinian territory
-- occupied by the Jewish state since 1967 -- as it requires obtaining entry
permits from Israel, a country most of them do not recognise. The game marked a
change in policy for the kingdom, which has previously played matches against
Palestine in third countries, in line with a decades-long Arab boycott of
Israel. However, in recent years, common concerns over Iran are widely seen as
having brought the Gulf powerhouse and Israel -- both staunch US allies --
closer together.

The Palestinian
football association described the Saudi team's arrival in the Palestinian
territories as a "win-win" situation. Critics see it as a step toward
normalisation with Israel, and Lebanon, Syria and Egypt still refuse to play in
the Palestinian territories.  But other
countries such as Bahrain, Morocco, the United Arab Emirates and Oman have sent
their clubs and teams to play in the West Bank.

'MEETING FIRST
SAUDI'

At the stadium,
large Palestinian and Saudi flags had been erected on the building behind it.
"God, Palestine and Jerusalem is Arab," the fans chanted, with the
stadium only a few miles from the holy city. Israel seized control of east
Jerusalem in a 1967 war, but Palestinians consider it the capital of their
future state. There were no Saudi fans at the stadium but pictures of Saudi
King Salman and Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman were erected alongside
Palestinian leader Mahmud Abbas and his predecessor Yasser Arafat.

Palestinians in
the West Bank have to go through Israeli checkpoints to leave and many have
little experience of the wider Middle East. Wajd Waji, 20, was among a group of
four young men wearing Palestinian football shirts

"It will be
the first time I have seen a Saudi person in real life," he told AFP.
"We meet them all the time on (online computer game) PubG. They are always
rude on PubG so we want to shout at them."

Only one of the
players in the first 11 was from Gaza, the other part of the Palestinian
territories under a blockade by Israel. The winners of the two cups in the West
Bank and Gaza are meant to play each other annually but this year it has been
delayed for months after Israel refused permits to most of the Gazan team's
players.

The Palestinians
had the first real chance, with striker Saleh Chihadeh hitting the keeper in
the 10th minute. The Saudis could have scored as well in the first half but
Yahya Al-Shehri's strike was well saved. In a second half short of chances,
Palestinian substitute Khaled Salem flicked a shot over the bar in the final
minutes. - AFP