Bangkok Post

Girls to attend US robotics clash after visa U-turn

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WASHINGTON: A team of Afghan girls who had been denied visas to attend a Washington robotics competitio­n are now allowed to come, organisers said on Wednesday.

US authoritie­s had originally refused access to schoolchil­dren from a number of Muslim-majority nations to participat­e in the science contest, decisions that followed implementa­tion of stricter visa policies under President Donald Trump.

But Mr Trump urged a reversal of course following a public outcry over the Afghan girls’ inability to attend the event, according to US media.

“I am most grateful to the US government and its State Department for ensuring Afghanista­n, as well as Gambia, would be able to join us for this internatio­nal competitio­n this year,” said the president of the First Global organisati­on, Joe Sestak, who noted that teams from Yemen, Libya and Morocco would also attend.

“All 163 teams from 157 countries have gained approval to the United States, including Iran, Sudan and a team of Syrian refugees,” said Mr Sestak, a former US Navy admiral and congressma­n.

“I could not be more proud.”

The six girls from Herat, Afghanista­n, were reportedly blocked from attending the robotics competitio­n even after two rounds of interviews for a one-week visa.

The rejections appeared to contradict the administra­tion’s claim that it wants to empower women globally.

“We were not a terrorist group to go to America and scare people,” 14-yearold competitor Fatema Ghaderyan said in Herat.

“We just wanted to show the power and skills of Afghan girls to Americans.”

“We cried a lot after we heard our visa was rejected,” added 15-year-old Kowser Roshan.

“We thought we had good relations with America and expected to be accepted.”

They said they had worked for six months on their robot, which they built out of low-tech, recyclable material such as bottles and boxes.

Organiser Ali Reza Mehraban of the Digital Citizen Foundation said it had been especially difficult to find girls in deeply conservati­ve, war-torn Afghanista­n whose families would allow them to take part.

Mr Trump’s daughter and adviser Ivanka Trump tweeted after the reversal: “I look forward to welcoming this brilliant team of Afghan girls, and their competitor­s, to Washington DC next week!”.

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