The Borneo Post (Sabah)

US soccer scraps ‘no kneel’ anthem policy after vote

-

LOS ANGELES: United States Soccer formally scrapped a controvers­ial policy banning players from kneeling during the national anthem on Saturday following a vote of members at the federation’s annual meeting.

US Soccer’s board of directors repealed the policy last year but the decision required confirmati­on by the full membership of the ruling body.

At Saturday’s meeting, the board’s decision to scrap the rule was backed by 71 per cent of voters, with 29 per cent against.

Explaining the decision to repeal the policy last year, US Soccer said the rule was wrong and reflected a failure of the federation to address the concerns of Black people and other minorities.

The rule ordering players to “stand respectful­ly” for the US national anthem was introduced in 2017.

It came after US women’s star Megan Rapinoe took a knee for the anthem at a 2016 internatio­nal in a gesture of solidarity with former NFL star Colin Kaepernick.

The USSF faced mounting pressure to review the no-kneel policy following the nationwide protests sparked by the death in police custody of unarmed Black man George Floyd in Minneapoli­s last year.

Kaepernick’s take-a-knee protest became an emblematic expression of solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement adopted during anti-racism demonstrat­ions around the world.

Kaepernick began kneeling during the anthem in August 2016 in order to draw attention to racial injustice following the deaths of several unarmed Black men during confrontat­ions with police. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia