Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Japan mayor battles for women’s right to enter sumo ring

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@hindustant­ime.com

A female mayor at the centre of a fierce debate over allowing women into the sumo ring vowed on Thursday never to back down as she prepared to lodge a formal protest.

“I won’t give up this time around ... I am determined to make a petition every six months,” Tomoko Nakagawa told AFP before taking her case to the sumo authoritie­s in Tokyo. “I want them never to leave this issue vague. I want the associatio­n to hear this voice clearly and start a debate on a review” of the practice of not allowing women into the sumo ring.

The issue hit the headlines nationally and internatio­nally when women, including at least one nurse, were shooed out of a sumo ring as they tried to help a man during a medical emergency.

In footage that was widely broadcast on national news bulletins, several women rushed into the ring in Maizuru, northwest of Kyoto, after a local mayor collapsed while giving a speech.

But as the women attempted to help the mayor, multiple announceme­nts were made over loudspeake­rs asking them to leave the ring.

The rings where sumo is practised, known as sumo dohyo, are seen as sacred places in the native Shinto faith.

Sumo is closely interlinke­d with Shinto, which considers women to be ritually unclean, meaning they are barred from stepping into the ring.

But Nakagawa, the administra­tive head of the western city of Takarazuka, described this as “discrimina­tion.”

TOKYO:

 ?? AFP ?? Tomoko Nakagawa, the mayor of the western Japanese city of Takarazuka.
AFP Tomoko Nakagawa, the mayor of the western Japanese city of Takarazuka.

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