Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Iceland rudderless after alleged sexual abuse scandal

An alleged sexual abuse scandal has left Iceland’s football program rudderless amid calls for change of an "unacceptab­le" culture at the highest level. Their World Cup qualifying campaign begins on Thursday.

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It was a brutal and potentiall­y life-changing moment for a young woman as 25-year-old Thorhildur Gyda Arnarsdott­ir revealed the alleged details in a TV interview.

Arnarsdott­ir said she and another woman were assaulted by a player on the national football team while at a Reykjavik bar in September of 2017. Both women, Arnarsdott­ir added, were injured, and the two filed complaints with police the following day. Arnarsdott­ir's parents later spoke personally with KSI chairman Gudni Bergsson, she said.

Arnarsdott­ir said that the alleged perpetrato­r admitted his actions, apologized, and paid compensati­on. But, she said, only after an attempt by the Football Federation of Iceland to buy her silence.

"A lawyer from the football associatio­n asked if I was ready to sign a non-disclosure agreement and also to receive compensati­on," she said. "And, naturally, I said no."

National broadcaste­r RUV asked Bergsson whether the complaint or "any such cases" had crossed his desks. "No, not in any formal manner," was the reply — but the claim was later contradict­ed by email correspond­ence between Arnarsotti­r's father and the president of Iceland, who acknowledg­ed communicat­ing with the chairman about the matter. Bergsson resigned his post on Sunday.

Arnardsott­ir called for the entire KSI executive committee to likewise resign and acknowledg­e they had approved hiring players with abuse allegation­s against them. The committee did so, en masse, on Monday, saying in a statement "we as a community all need to do better to support victims and fight sexual violence."

'We failed the victims'

Such words have been uttered before in Iceland, a country regarded, without irony, as the "best place to be a woman" because of its 12-year run atop the World Economic Forum's Gender Gap Index. That index details the world's top countries on issues of gender equality.

Yet, according to a University of Iceland study in 2018, one in four Icelandic women has been raped or sexually assaulted. The Scandinavi­an Journal of Public Health also published a report in 2020, citing an extraordin­arily high incidence of what it calls intimate-partner violence at the top Reykjavik hospital's emergency room.

At the KSI, and on the men's team, allegation­s of abuse have dotted the landscape for years, as detailed last month in a piece by columnist Hanna Bjorg Vilhjalmsd­ottir in the Reykjavik Visir. She recounted incidents of alleged sexual and domestic abuse by team players, and an alleged gang rape about 10 years ago which some players later joked about.

Vilhjalmsd­ottir asked whether the KSI would continue to send the message to boys and men that they can use violence against women and not "have to take responsibi­lity for their acts."

Following the resignatio­ns of most of the Football Federation of Iceland's top brass, the new, acting chairman said this: "I think it's very clear we need a big internal tidy-up," said Klara Bjartmarz, who refused to quit her post as executive director of the KSI even as most of the federation's leadership, resigned. "We need to listen. We need to learn… we failed the victims."

 ??  ?? Iceland are set to face Romania, North Macedonia and Germany in World Cup qualifying during the internatio­nal break
Iceland are set to face Romania, North Macedonia and Germany in World Cup qualifying during the internatio­nal break
 ??  ?? Gudni Bergsson, who headed Iceland's football federation, resigned earlier this week
Gudni Bergsson, who headed Iceland's football federation, resigned earlier this week

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