Khaleej Times

HRW praises Saudi end to girls’ sports ban

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riyadh — Human Rights Watch welcomed on Saturday a recommenda­tion by Saudi Arabia’s consultati­ve Shura Council to lift the ban on sports in girls’ state schools.

On Tuesday, the council recommende­d that the longstandi­ng ban, relaxed in private schools last year, be ended altogether, state media in the kingdom reported.

It is now up to the education ministry to decide whether to lift the ban, as the council is only advisory. All education in Saudi Arabia is single-sex, but sports in girls schools remains a sensitive issue.

“Saudi Arabia has a long way to go to end discrimina­tory practices against women, but allowing girls to play sports in government schools would move the ball down the field in ways that could have major long-term impact,” HRW’s Sarah Leah Whitson said.

“It’s a good sign that Saudi authoritie­s appear to realise letting all girls in Saudi Arabia play sports is important to their physical and mental wellbeing,” she said.

The group urged the government to “set out a clear strategy and accelerate­d timeline for rolling out physical education for girls in public and private schools”. It also demanded the kingdom start licensing women’s gyms and facilitate the participat­ion of women in all sports.

The issue came under the spotlight at the 2012 Olympic Games in London, when the kingdom bowed to internatio­nal pressure and sent female athletes to compete for the first time.

The Internatio­nal Olympic Committee agreed to allow the two Saudi women — a judo player and a middle-distance runner — to compete with their heads and bodies covered in deference to the Islamic dress code enforced at home.

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