No booze? No problem for most fans at the World Cup in Qatar

DOHA, Nov 29 (Reuters) – Soccer fans at the almost alcohol-free World Cup are ready to pay high prices for a beer, a few have tried to smuggle booze into stadiums but most simply accept that drinking is off limits at the first tournament in a Muslim country.

World soccer governing body FIFA reversed course in mid-November, two days before the first match kicked off, and announced that no alcoholic beer would be sold at stadiums in Qatar where it is an offense to drink alcohol or be drunk in public.

While beer is available at designated World Cup fan zones and in some hotels, the hassle and the cost of finding alcohol — half a liter is sold for 50 Qatari riyalis ($13.70) in fan zones — are simply too much for many supporters from countries where beer is typically part of the match-day routine.

“For me, it’s a tradition of having a beer, watching a game, enjoying the game with friends,” said Stefan Pacquee, a Belgian doctor who traveled to Qatar from his home in Sydney, Australia, as he made his way into a stadium before Belgium’s 2-0 defeat by Morocco on Sunday.

He said he had his first beer-and-football experience aged 16 with his father.

“So I miss it. And I don’t think the Budweiser Zero is going to compensate for that. But hey, we’re here, the weather’s beautiful, it’s a great atmosphere,” Pacquee said.

LARGELY DRY

Germany fan Christian Kopatsch said alcohol was often banned at matches in his home country which was considered to be at high risk of violence among supporters, so the dry World Cup was not a big adjustment for him.

He said he noticed a change in the atmosphere where, apart from minor skirmishes between a few fans of Mexico and Argentina, there have been no reports of violence, in contrast to trouble that broke out in Belgium after Morocco’s win and fighting between England and Wales fans in Tenerife, Spain.

“I think it’s more peaceful. You don’t have these very drunk people everywhere and people are just normal and happy,” Kopatsch said before Germany’s 1-1 draw with Spain on Sunday.

He has not even tried to find a drink.

“I can do without alcohol for a week,” he said.

Not everyone is so accepting of the rules.

A video shared on Twitter showed security staff seizing what appeared to be a pair of binoculars turned into a secret booze bottle by a Mexico fan trying to get into his country’s match against Argentina on Saturday, which Mexico lost 2-0.

One of the security officials is seen unscrewing one of the eye cups and simulating having a swig to show a colleague what he has discovered while the fan in a green, white and red wig seems to gesture that the contents are in fact hand wash.

But most supporters seem to understand that, for this tournament, old habits will have to be put on hold.

Spain fan Raimundo Oujo, a businessman from La Coruna, said the mood in the stadiums was a little less charged than usual as a result of the booze ban.

“It’s a fact that we always celebrate with drinks before or after, so I think it can make a difference, but it’s not a critical factor,” he said.

“Let’s celebrate some other way, or you can also celebrate when you come back home and then you can have a big party.”

Additional reporting by Javier Andres Rojas and Christophe Van Der Perre; writing by William Schomberg, editing by Ed Osmond

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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How Roberto’s Taco Shop became a Southwest chain, phenomenon

ANAHEIM, Calif. — Roberto’s, Alberto’s, Filiberto’s, Juanberto’s … If you have lived in or around the Southwest states, chances are you’ve seen a variation of a “Berto’s” Mexican fast-food restaurant, the majority possessing an identifiable orange and yellow color scheme and a logo in a cursive font.

Over the years, variations of the restaurant — we’ll explain how and why there are so many — are commonly defined by its carne asada burritos, beef tacos and rolled taco combination plates, among other savory Mexican food items.

It’s hard to miss and what you see is what you usually get anywhere there may be one.

The concept originates from Roberto’s Taco Shop, a family-owned fast-food restaurant that initially opened its doors to San Diego in the late 1960s.

The founders were Roberto, the shop’s namesake, and Dolores Robledo, who immigrated from the small town of San Juan del Salado in San Luis Potosí, Mexico.

One of the nation’s first Mexican fast-food chains, the family-run Roberto’s Taco Shop introduced an innovative blueprint that would spur copycats and imitators in the Southwest and even abroad.

A Roberto's Taco Shop in Chula Vista, Calif., opened in 1980 by Raul Robledo.
A Roberto’s Taco Shop in Chula Vista, Calif., opened in 1980 by Raul Robledo.Courtesy Roberto’s Taco Shop; LLC

More than 70 variations have been reported across the Southwest states and the majority are owned by people who originate from the same region in Mexico that the Robledos are from. Roberto would encourage family members to work with him and eventually advocated for them to open their own shops once they got familiar with the system he helped establish.

“My father was from the frame of thought that this is the land of opportunity. And if you’re willing to work hard, there’s enough business to go around,” recalled Jose Robledo, 52, the youngest of the 13 Robledo children. “He was always there to lend a helping hand to everybody who wanted to get into the business.”

An American immigrant dream

Roberto first came to the United States in the mid 1940s under the Bracero program, which allowed millions of Mexican men to legally work in the country through short-term labor contracts. He would later hold multiple jobs, including being a waiter, working in construction and washing cars on the weekends. When he brought his wife and their children over, Dolores would pack sardines at a cannery and wash hotel industry towels for a linen company.

In 1964, the family purchased two adjacent homes in San Ysidro, near the US-Mexico border. One house was where they lived, the other was converted into a tortilla factory to make corn and flour tortillas to deliver to other restaurants. They also sold bean and cheese burritos, chile verde (green chile) burritos and chile colorado burritos at that time.

The Robledos got their start by making tortillas in San Ysidro, Calif., to sell to restaurants before they opened their own eating establishments.
The Robledos got their start by making tortillas in San Ysidro, Calif., to sell to restaurants before they opened their own eating establishments. Courtesy Roberto’s Taco Shop; LLC

“At first, that’s all they sold,” said Reynaldo Robledo, 57, the 12th of the Robledo children.

The Robledos would eventually acquire four businesses and operate them under the original establishment names such as La Lomita and El Gallito.

It wasn’t until the fifth shop they purchased, a hamburger joint, that they would rename it “Roberto’s #5” under Roberto’s name.

“It was the first Roberto’s … from there forward, all the restaurants we opened were Roberto’s Taco Shop,” said Reynaldo, who grew up working in the family business as a cook.

The business became a rite of passage for Reynaldo and his siblings; at the same time, his father encouraged workers from his ranch to open their own shops.

Reynaldo has franchised Roberto’s Taco Shop in Nevada and says there are 60 stores in the region. Plus, there are also 20 shops in California and one in Texas, all owned by the original family.

But that’s just part of it. More than 70 ‘Berto’ variations have been documented across the Southwest — and there’s a possibility there are more that aren’t using the “Berto’s” namesake, according to several family members.

“All of those people are from where my dad’s from,” Reynaldo said.

While other shop owners may become upset about people copying and imitating their own restaurant, Roberto welcomes it.

From Roberto’s to Alberto’s

Here’s how the “Berto’s” variation came about.

Roberto prided himself on the fact the restaurants served fresh food made daily, a standard he held at all of the shops he owned and rented others to — and one that continues today by his children. When Roberto found out that relatives weren’t serving food with fresh ingredients at one shop they rented from him, he wasn’t too happy.

“My dad told them to change the name. And that’s where Alberto’s came,” Reynaldo said referring to the first variant. “The saying goes that on their

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Former MI5 chief warns food supplies are matter of national security

The UK should increase visas for seasonal workers as part of a drive to cultivate as much food as possible domestically, a former chief of MI5 has said.

Baroness Eliza Manningham-Buller, who led the domestic intelligence service from 2002 to 2007, said in a lecture that security of food supplies would fit within the government’s own definition of national security. She said she believed this meant strengthening domestic supply.

“We need to acknowledge that we should produce as much of our own food as we can, with due regard to sustainability, and be able to export what we can,” the former director-general of the Security Service told members of the National Farmers ‘ Union.

“Several people [have] said that [food security] was about just getting a secure food line from somewhere else. . . I’ve interpreted it differently,” Manningham-Buller said.

“We have a hope that we will continue to get food from our nearest neighbors as we get energy from them. But I think the more we can be self-sufficient, the better chances we have of standing price hikes, spikes, shocks and so on — and politics.”

Manningham-Buller, who now runs a small sheep farm in Wales, added: “[We] clearly need a better visa policy so that these workers who are not available here can come here and help us.

“We must have visas for seasonal workers. And it’s not just about [the food sector], there’s a shortage of labor across the economy, whether it’s care homes, whether it’s doctors and nurses . . . It shouldn’t be beyond our wit to develop a visa system that deals with that.”

Manningham-Buller’s intervention comes as the UK grapples with its post-Brexit food policy and after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine brought supply lines into the spotlight by risking international grain flows. She said this constituted a “weaponisation of food”.

UK farmers are pushing for a larger allocation of visas for seasonal workers to pick fruit and vegetables, saying that the current 40,000 tally falls far short of the 70,000-80,000 needed. But a succession of home secretaries has pushed back against increasing numbers as they seek to keep overall migration numbers down.

The free market Institute of Economic Affairs think-tank, whose ideas inform parts of the ruling Conservative party’s thinking, has meanwhile argued that agricultural policy should focus on UK farmers competing in global markets. Parliament’s environment, food and rural affairs committee is holding an inquiry into food security.

Manningham-Buller’s comments align her with the farming lobby, which has pushed for a strategic move to increase domestic food cultivation — which currently provides about 54 per cent of the UK’s supplies — and for post-Brexit farm subsidies to recognize the role of food production alongside environmental improvements.

The former MI5 head said she had overseen a doubling of the security service’s staffing and a drive to broaden the thinking of successive governments on national security, pushing other public bodies to consider its relevance to areas such as food.

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