The Niagara Falls Review

Colombian female soccer players denounce sexual discrimina­tion

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BOGOTA — Two female players have accused the Colombian soccer federation of threatenin­g to fire them for denouncing sexual discrimina­tion.

Isabella Echeverri and Melissa Ortiz, who both play for Colombia’s national team, criticized the conditions of female players in Colombia in videos posted on social media. “We have decided to be honest about the reality of soccer in our country with a series of videos that we hope boost awareness,” they wrote in a text accompanyi­ng the videos. “We love our country and we want things to change for the better for female players.

“We feel threatened. We are not paid,” they add in the videos. “They don’t provide internatio­nal flights for us. Our uniforms are old. The federation has excluded players for speaking out.”

The federation has not responded to the accusation­s.

In 2017, the federation and profession­al league Dimayor started a women’s soccer league. It will play its third season this year.

The female players want to reduce the long periods between each season and be paid enough to live off their wages.

Millonario­s and Sergio Arboleda University are starting a women’s team next season. The players who join the new club will have stipends, but wages will still be low.

“The women’s league is becoming shorter and shorter. The players are working in increasing­ly precarious conditions,” Ortiz told local radio broadcaste­r La W.

Echeverri and Ortiz have posted different versions of the videos, including one in English.

“We seek visibility and to boost awareness of the reality of women’s soccer,” Echeverri said. “They only show us when we play in the World Cup or the Olympic Games.”

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