Since the World Cup kicked off three weeks ago, Sunni Muslim extremists have seized territory in Iraq and Syria and declared an Islamic state. Lebanon has been hit by a spate of suicide bombings. Israelis and Palestinians were pushed on the edge of full conflict after the murders of four teenagers.
Many accuse the Doha-based network of editorial bias in favour of the now banned Islamic group in Egypt and of Sunni insurgents fighting Shiite-dominated governments in Syria and Iraq.
Qatar's media conglomerate owns broadcasting rights to the World Cup in the Middle East, charging from USD 110 to USD 320 for a three-month subscription that includes the 64 World Cup matches a tournament that should be a welcome escape for millions of soccer fans from endless political turmoil.
Watching a recent match in a cafe in downtown Cairo, 21-year-old student Mohammed Mostafa said his family is boycotting Al-Jazeera and instead tunes in to an Israeli channel that has been broadcasting the World Cup for free, with commentary in Hebrew a foreign language to most Arabs.
"My parents refuse to give money to the Brotherhood," Mostafa explained.
That kind of attitude has outraged officials in Egypt, where state media has lashed out at Israel by saying it has opportunistically barged into the Arab broadcasting market.
But he also criticised Qatar, saying the oil-rich Gulf state should have dismantled Israel's plot to win over Egyptian fans, and offer a subsidised deal to the Cairo government that would air the World Cup to its citizens for free.
Israel "is our biggest enemy," Shabana said. "If the only way (to avoid Israel's channel) is to give money to Qatar, then we should do it.
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