Word: qatar
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...Shahar Peer, ranked 17th on the women's tennis tour, requested a berth in the Qatar Open, which runs from Feb. 18-24 in the capital city, Doha, and offers a $2.5 million purse. To her surprise, Peer found she was pushing against an open door; both the Qatar tournament organizers and the Women's Tennis Association (WTA) agreed that she could compete. "They all welcomed me warmly," she told TIME at the end of a grueling practice session in Tel Aviv with her part-time coach, Conchita Mart ínez, a 1994 Wimbledon champion. Tennis officials assured the young...
...Israel and Qatar do not have diplomatic ties, and no matter how hard Peer battles on the Doha hard courts, or how many Arab fans she wins over, she doesn't expect to ease hostilities overnight. "I'm here to play tennis," she says. "But if this opens up a window for the younger generation, with Arabs and Israelis working together for peace, I'd be happy." If Peer is treated well in Qatar, other top Israeli players may apply to compete in Dubai's prestigious championship, which follows Doha...
...Letting an Israeli onto the tennis courts serves to Qatar's advantage. The emirate is competing to host the 2016 Olympic Games, so it is keen to sell itself as a politics-free oasis in the roiling Middle East. Behind the scenes, say diplomats, Qatar is also one of several moderate Arab states trying to broker peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians. "We'd love to open an embassy there," says Israeli Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Amira Oron. "But for now, it's impossible...
...Peer wanted to compete in the Qatar Open in previous years, but she was doing her obligatory military service, and Israel bans its soldiers from visiting Arab countries. "Believe me, basic army training was nowhere near as hard as my tennis workout," says Peer, who, even at age 6, would roll out of bed at 5 a.m. to hit the courts. At 5 ft. 7 in. (1.74 m) and 132 lbs. (60 kg), she admits she isn't "physically huge," but she makes up for it in speed. Off court, she paces restlessly, as if she can't wait...
...haven that loses its seductive charms, there's another working hard to woo the rich. Dubai, which has been dubbed the Switzerland of the gulf, has spent billions creating zones where foreigners can set up and invest in companies free from corporate tax. And other gulf states like Qatar and Oman are following Dubai's lead by making their own tax regimes more foreigner-friendly...