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Big screens
will air World Cup matches for free in Makkah. Football is the most popular sport in Saudi Arabia. |
A Saudi football fan has reportedly asked his wife to
follow a set of rules throughout the World Cup championship to ensure
their marriage is not put at risk.
And to stress that "prevention is better than cure", the husband
wrote down the rules and made copies that he placed in different areas
of the house so that his wife does not miss or forget them, local news
site Ain Al Yawm reported on Monday.
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Stunning image of Bedouin Arabs watching a match in a makeshift camp in the desert. |
Under the ad hoc rules, the wife has to inform her husband about any
plans to go out to see her family or to visit her friends at least two
hours before the start of any match. Trips to shopping centres that can
take hours can be made only on days when no football matches are
scheduled, the husband said.
Women are not allowed to drive and they therefore depend on their
husbands or relatives in case they plan to go out and do not wish to
take a taxi. People in Saudi Arabia can watch live the football matches
being currently played in Brazil at 7pm, 11pm and 1am.
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A Saudi
football fan has reportedly asked his wife to follow a set of rules
throughout the World Cup championship to ensure their marriage is not affected |
he wife has also been warned to avoid making any comments when the
husband is extremely upset or exceedingly jubilant. "I might under the
emotional stress hurl the remote control and I do not want you to be the
target. I am keen on preserving your natural beauty," he wrote in his
note.
"When there is a crucial match, I want you to be ready to accept my
excesses in cheering my favourite team. I might have several outbursts
and I do not want them to scare you off," he said. He added that he
wanted the Italians to win the Cup. The husband said that the rules
would last until the final whistle of the final game on July 13.
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Religious
police perform dusk prayers with Saudi youth outside a Riyadh cafe on
June 27, 2010 during half-time of the Germany-England World Cup |
audis are particularly fond of football and pictures being circulated on
social media have shown the extent of their passion for the World Cup.
One Saudi has converted his majlis into a replica of a stadium and
adorned it with flags of his favourite teams.
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