Global Times

Tokyo golf club lifts ban on women members

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The club scheduled to hold the 2020 Tokyo Olympic Games’ golf events voted to admit women as full members on Monday, scrapping an all- male policy that had been heavily criticized and put its hosting rights in jeopardy.

The private Kasumigase­ki Country Club took the decision to change its bylaws at an extraordin­ary board meeting after being told last month that the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee ( IOC) would find another venue if the policy remained unaltered.

The Saitama prefecture venue is scheduled to host both men’s and women’s tournament­s in July and August in 2020, but rules forbidding women from both playing on Sundays or becoming full members had been roundly condemned, leading to Monday’s vote.

“We are pleased to learn that the Kasumigase­ki Country Club voted today ... to amend the club’s membership policy in keeping with the spirit of the Olympic Charter,” Tokyo Games chief Yoshiro Mori said in a statement.

“On behalf of the Tokyo 2020 Organizing Committee, I’d like to extend my gratitude to the members of the club for their understand­ing and cooperatio­n.”

The club was closed due to a national holiday on Monday, meaning no one was available for comment when contacted by Reuters.

IOC Vice President John Coates had last month said that organizers would seek an alternativ­e venue if the club could not achieve gender equality, and Olympic chief Thomas Bach reiterated the governing body’s stance last week.

“Kasumigase­ki Country Club is an outstandin­g venue with excellent courses, and we are proud it will be hosting world’s top- tier golfers from all over the world for the Olympic Games,” Mori added of the decision.

“I truly appreciate the numerous efforts that the club’s senior leadership and all the club members have made so far to meet the requiremen­ts for hosting Olympic competitio­ns.”

Several notable golf clubs have changed their policies to allow female members in recent years.

In 2014, the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, which is regarded as the worldwide “Home of Golf,” decided to allow women to join following 260 years of exclusion, after Augusta National, home of the US Masters, had ended its men- only membership two years earlier.

Last week, Muirfield voted to admit women members, scrapping a policy that led to the historic Scottish links course being stripped of its eligibilit­y to host the British Open.

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