A British brewers public stand against the host country of the upcoming soccer World Cup seemed to backfire on Monday when past reports of its own culture of fear resurfaced.
Multinational brewery and pub chain BrewDog, which is headquartered in Scotland, declared that it was the proud anti-sponsor of the World F*Cup.
This isnt a World Cup. Its a World F*Cup, it said in a statement. Footballs been dragged through the mud before a single balls been kicked. Lets be honest: Qatar won it through bribery. On an industrial scale.
BrewDog went on to criticize practices and laws in Qatar including the criminalization of homosexuality, the use of flogging as punishment for committing crimes, and the reported deaths of thousands of migrant workers working on World Cup infrastructure projects in the country.
As part of its anti-sponsor campaign, BrewDog has put up billboards criticizing Qatar and the World Cup. First Russia, then Qatar. Cant wait for North Korea, one of them reads.
Russia hosted the last World Cup in 2018.
To be clear we love football, we just dont love corruption, abuse and death, BrewDog said on Monday.
So join us. Lets raise a glass to the players. To the fans. To free speech. And two fingers to anyone who thinks a World Cup in Qatar makes sense.
The firm said it was donating all of the profits from its Lost Lager drink sold during the World Cup tournament to human rights charities.
Fortune reached out to international soccers governing body, FIFA, and the Qatari government for comment on BrewDogs statement, but no response was received by the time of publication.
Backlash against BrewDog
While there was praise for BrewDogs stance on the World Cup, many prominent individuals and organizations pointed out holes in the companys campaign.
Andrew Cahill, vice president of sports and entertainment at New York marketing agency MKTG, posted on LinkedIn: This is a sizeable contradiction from BrewDog. Brewdog will be showing the matches live on screens in venues and profiting from revenue generated from all food and drink, other than Lost Lager. Whoops.
Chris Soult, associate director at CSM Sport & Entertainment, replied: Not to mention the accusations around their own history of cutting corners on H&S and bullying staff
British trade union Unite also criticized the craft beer-maker, branding it one of the worst employers in the industry.
Bryan Simpson, Unites industrial organizer for the hospitality sector told City AM: The treatment of workers in Qatar is an international scandal but BrewDog have a cheek saying anything about workers rights when hundreds of their own workers (past and present) signed an open letter detailing a culture of fear with workers demanding an apology for harassing, assaulting, belittling, insulting or gaslighting them.
This is yet another disingenuous advertising campaign designed to distract customers from the fact that BrewDog is one of the worst employers in the brewing industry when it comes to doing the right thing thing by workers.
BrewDog CEO and Co-founder James Watt argued the company wanted to give [people] the opportunity to watch the games and raise money to drive positive change at the same time.
The company has reportedly spent millions of dollars trying to fix its culture problems, with boss Watt publicly apologizing for former employees negative experiences with the firm.
A spokesperson for BrewDog was not available for comment when contacted by Fortune.
The problem with Qatars World Cup
The 2022 soccer World Cup, which is set to begin in Qatar in Nov. 20, has been plagued by scandal since the country won its bid to host the tournament in 2010.
Qatar faced a slew of corruption allegations over its campaign to host the event, including accusations that the country had bribed FIFA officials with millions of dollars to back its bid. A two-year investigation later cleared Qatar of corruption.
The World Cup is also facing protests over Qatars human rights records and anti-LGBT laws. Paris and other French cities are refusing to screen matches in public areasdespite France being the defending World Cup holders.
Meanwhile, Danish players will alter their kits during the World Cup to protest against Qatars human rights practices, and several European team captainsincluding those of England, France, Germany and Belgiumwill wear OneLove armbands during their matches to protest against LGBTQ+ discrimination.
On Sunday, the soccer associations of 10 European countries, including England, Germany and Portugal, said in an open letter that they were continuing to press FIFA to take action to improve human rights in Qatar ahead of the World Cup.
Sign up for the Fortune Features email list so you dont miss our biggest features, exclusive interviews, and investigations.