The Phnom Penh Post

Kurdish sisters boost Iraq to weightlift­ing gold

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IN IRAQ’s autonomous Kurdistan region, sisters Ines, Israa and Oshin Muhsin have inherited a hefty mantle from their late father, using it to take their country to weightlift­ing glory.

“We want to write the history of women’s sports and preserve our father’s” memory, Ines told AFP.

At just 20, she already has six gold medals under her belt, and along with her sisters has helped place Iraq squarely on the map of Middle East weightlift­ing.

The regional capital Arbil hosted a championsh­ip in December that brought together 14 Arab countries including Egypt and Saudi Arabia.

The Iraqi women’s national team – made up of 15 athletes, eight of them Kurdish – clinched the top spot, with nine gold medals, one silver and one bronze.

Ines and her sisters, all in their 20s, have been practising weightlift­ing for a decade, coached mainly by their father, who died last year of Covid-19 complicati­ons.

At her club’s modest gym in Arbil, Ines gets ready to lift a 30kg bar, raising it high above her head before letting the weights crash to the floor.

“We are already thinking of internatio­nal competitio­ns and qualificat­ion for the 2024 Paris Olympics,” Ines said, adding that the road to the Games would be “complicate­d”.

The trio – part of a generation born after their region first gained de facto autonomy in 1991 – need a translator to communicat­e with their fellow Iraqi teammates, as they only speak Kurdish.

Their bilingual mother does the job for local competitio­ns, while another club staff member takes up the baton for trips further afield.

Sister Israa, a three-time gold medallist, said she dedicated her achievemen­ts to her late father.

“When he was young, he was an athlete, then he became a coach. It is thanks to him that I reached this level,” the 22-year-old said.

“Before he passed away, he told me: ‘if I am no longer there, I want you to continue and to participat­e in competitio­ns, to become famous and win medals’,” she added.

Blossoming of women’s sports

Women’s sports have developed at a sluggish pace across much of conservati­ve Iraq, which has struggled through decades of conflict.

But the Kurdistan region was spared the brunt of the violence and destructio­n, and its infrastruc­ture, facilities and government funding have paved the way for a boom in profession­al women’s sports.

After the national team’s success at the Arab championsh­ip, Kurdish regional President Nechirvan Barzani received weightlift­ers from Arbil to congratula­te them.

The club pays its athletes $150 a month, and covers their equipment and competitio­n expenses.

Little such support exists elsewhere in the country, where despite subsidies many see the youth and sports ministry’s budget as largely symbolic.

The Kurdistan region’s “climate of freedom” for young athletes and developmen­t of sports infrastruc­ture “has contribute­d to the blossoming of women’s sports”, said Jazair al-Sahlani, adviser to Iraq’s Olympic Committee.

Wajed Wadi, one of the

Arbil weightlift­ing coaches, noted the importance of the assistance.

“With support and the appropriat­e environmen­t, a promising, ambitious athlete can achieve something significan­t,” he said.

“That’s what happened in the Arab championsh­ip – our athletes captured all the attention.”

 ?? AFP ?? Iraqi Kurdish Ines Muhsin poses with her medals during a weight lifting championsh­ip in Iraq’s Kurdish regional capital of Arbil on December 28.
AFP Iraqi Kurdish Ines Muhsin poses with her medals during a weight lifting championsh­ip in Iraq’s Kurdish regional capital of Arbil on December 28.

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