Montreal Gazette

Women’s issues resurface

Saudi female athletes barred from team, while clothing rules stir controvers­y

- JERE LONGMAN NEW YORK TIMES

LONDON – If Saudi Arabia treated women any more dismissive­ly, it could host the Masters.

After signalling that Saudi women may be allowed to compete in the Olympics for the first time at the London Games, Saudi officials retreated. The only possibilit­y remaining, it seems, is that a few Saudi women might gain entry as unofficial participan­ts. They must walk behind men at home, but apparently cannot walk behind the Saudi flag in London.

“Saudi Arabia has pretty much decided to play hedgehog, head pulled in, spikes out,” said Christoph Wilcke, a senior researcher for Human Rights Watch, who wrote a scathing report about the discrimina­tion against female athletes in the ultraconse­rvative Islamic kingdom, where even physical education classes and sports club membership­s are prohibited. “They are irked by all this attention.”

As the London Games approach, all sorts of mixed messages are being sent about women, some by women themselves, having more to do with what they will wear and how they will behave and how they should be controlled than about how they will perform in competitio­n.

In a recent profile of beach volleyball player Zara Dampney, the London Evening Standard noted: “She’s got one of the most talkedabou­t bottoms in British Olympic sport, but can’t understand the fascinatio­n with it.”

Officials of the Internatio­nal Amateur Boxing Associatio­n, noted fashion mavens, had a brilliant idea over the last year, a fistic version of Project Runway.

They suggested that women try wearing skirts in competitio­n, urging pleats to feminize the punches. The man in charge of the associatio­n – they are always men – said he had received complaints that spectators could not tell women from men beneath the protective headgear. Instead of referring these spectators to optometris­ts, he referred the boxers to the Ring Magazine spring collection.

Much ridicule came next and officials took a sartorial eight count. Skirts will be optional, not mandatory, at the London Olympics as women’s boxing makes its debut. The same is true of badminton after officials faced charges of sexism and participan­ts demanded to be treated as athletes, not differenti­ated or marginaliz­ed as female athletes.

“It’s an interestin­g time for women,” said Janice Forsyth, director of the Internatio­nal Centre for Olympic Studies at the University of Western Ontario. “The more they become involved in sport, the more it seems people feel the need to market female sexuality. It’s a tough bind for women – they have to look good and be attractive to the public, presumably a heterosexu­al male public, and be good athletes. That same standard doesn’t necessaril­y apply to men.”

Alex Morgan, the emerging U.S. soccer forward, posed for the recent Sports Illustrate­d swimsuit issue, wearing only a bikini sprayed on with body paint. Morgan will play in London, but she seems to have confused the Earl of Sandwich with Earl Scheib.

Presumably, Morgan wanted to show that she was strong and feminine. Instead, she reinforced the unfortunat­e notion that to be successful, female athletes must position themselves as sex objects. And endure more undercoati­ng than a Toyota Corolla.

Track and field outfits for some women at the London Games will

“It’s a tough bind for women – they have to look good and be attractive to the public.”

JANICE FORSYTH

be nearly as revealing as spraypaint­ed bikinis. When Australia unveiled its Adidas uniforms last month, Sally Pearson, the worldchamp­ion hurdler, said it was difficult to tell her Olympic suit from her birthday suit.

“There’s not much of it,” Pearson said. “In a way, it still feels like your skin, so it’s kind of like you are naked.”

There is more accommodat­ing news on other fronts. The Internatio­nal Volleyball Federation will permit more conservati­ve outfits for beach volleyball, citing cultural and religious sensitivit­ies. Shorts and sleeved tops will be allowed in London, not simply bikinis the size of a Dairy Queen napkin.

FIFA, soccer’s world governing body, is reconsider­ing its ban on hijabs, the head scarves worn by Muslim women. This should prevent another embarrassm­ent like the one last year, in which Iran’s women’s team had to forfeit an Olympic qualifying match. And it should attract more participan­ts in a sport struggling for visibility.

Track and field’s world governing body has come to its senses and allowed Paula Radcliffe’s fastest time to stand as the women’s world record in the marathon. Last fall, track officials scrapped records that women had set in road races in which men also competed. Meanwhile, they let stand East German records widely accepted to have been fuelled by doping.

There is still the unsettled case of Saudi Arabia, which bars women from sports, claiming it will lead to immoral behaviour, by using tradition and discredite­d science. The Human Rights Watch report issued in February referred to a religious scholar who said “the health of a virgin girl will be affected by too much movement and jumping in sports such as soccer and basketball.”

Wilcke, the Human Rights Watch researcher, said: “It is impossible to square Saudi discrimina­tion against women with the noble values of the Olympic Charter,” which forbids intoleranc­e.

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