Daily Dispatch

Afghan football in abuse furore

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Afghan President Ashraf Ghani has called for an investigat­ion into claims of sexual abuse against the national women’s football team, calling the allegation­s “shocking” and vowing to act immediatel­y.

The president’s call, made on Tuesday, came days after the Guardian newspaper broke a story about allegation­s of sexual and physical abuse of members of the women’s team by male officials, including the president of the country’s football federation.

“It is shocking to all Afghans. Any kind of misconduct against athletes, male or female, is not acceptable,” Ghani said after meeting with the country’s attorney general.

“I ask Mr Attorney General to conduct a thorough investigat­ion compliant with our legal codes into the issue,” he said.

The Guardian cited what it described as senior figures associated with the women’s team who said the abuse had taken place in Afghanista­n, including at the Afghanista­n Football Federation (AFF) headquarte­rs, and at a training camp in Jordan last February.

The story quoted former captain Khalida Popal – who fled the country after receiving death threats and has spoken out previously about the discrimina­tion women face in Afghanista­n – as saying male officials were “coercing” female players.

AFF secretary general Sayed Alireza Aqazada batted away the allegation­s over the weekend, saying untrue.

However Hafizullah Wali Rahimi – president of Afghanista­n’s Olympic committee – said such allegation­s were not new.

“Abuse by the heads of federation­s, trainers and sportsmen have always existed. We have had complaints in the past,” Rahimi told local media.

Ghani called for immediate the claims were action on the matter.

“Even if mere allegation­s cause our people to stop sending their sons and daughters to sports, we need to act immediatel­y and comprehens­ively.

“I do not tolerate sexual Ghani said.

“No power on earth can abuse our children. We have to have a framework in place to mitigate such incidents in our sports federation­s,” he said.

Football’s world governing body Fifa has also said it was looking into claims of sexual and physical abuse in the Afghan national women’s team, while the Danish sportswear company Hummel announced it had cancelled a sponsorshi­p deal with the team due to the allegation­s.

The attorney general’s office said it had already assembled a team to investigat­e the issue.

Afghanista­n has made strides to promote female football and launched its first all-women’s football league four years ago that ran in parallel with the men’s. In 2017 the female teams were sidelined by a lack of funding. — abuse,”

 ?? Picture: AFP / NOORULLAH SHIRZADA ?? DEFENSIVE: Secretary general of the Afghanista­n football federation Sayed Alireza Aqazada has denied allegation­s of sexual abuse within their national women’s team.
Picture: AFP / NOORULLAH SHIRZADA DEFENSIVE: Secretary general of the Afghanista­n football federation Sayed Alireza Aqazada has denied allegation­s of sexual abuse within their national women’s team.

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