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London 2012 Olympics: Saudis allow women to compete

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Saudi Arabia is to allow its women athletes to compete in the Olympics for the first time.

A statement issued by the Saudi Embassy in London says the country's Olympic Committee will "oversee participation of women athletes who can qualify".

The decision will end recent speculation as to whether the entire Saudi team could have been disqualified on grounds of gender discrimination.

Women's sport is still fiercely opposed by many Saudi religious conservatives.

There is almost no public tradition of women participating in sport in the country.

Saudi officials say that with the Games now just a few weeks away, the only female competitor at Olympic standard is showjumper Dalma Rushdi Malhas.

But they added that there may be scope for others to compete and that if successful they would be dressed "to preserve their dignity".

In practice this is likely to mean modest, loose-fitting garments and "a sports hijab", a scarf covering the hair but not the face.

For the desert kingdom, the decision to allow women to compete in the Olympics is a huge step, overturning deep-rooted opposition from those opposed to any public role for women.

As recently as April, the indications were that Saudi Arabia's rulers would accede to the sensitivities of the religious conservatives and maintain the ban on allowing women to take part.

But for the past six weeks there have been intense, behind-the-scenes discussions led by King Abdullah, who has long been pushing for women to play a more active role in Saudi society.

'Subtle reform'

In secret meetings in Jeddah, officials say a consensus was reached in mid-June between the king, the crown prince, the foreign minister, the leading religious cleric, the grand mufti and others, to overturn the ban.

An announcement was ready to be made but then had to be delayed as the country marked the sudden death of Crown Prince Nayef.

"It's very sensitive," a senior Saudi official told the BBC. "King Abdullah is trying to initiate reform in a subtle way, by finding the right balance between going too fast or too slow.

"For example, he allowed the participation of women in the Shura council [an advisory body] so the Olympic decision is part of an ongoing process, it's not isolated."

The official acknowledged that to refuse to let women take part would have looked bad on the international stage.

"Partly because of the mounting criticism we woke up and realised we had to deal with this. We believe Saudi society will accept this," the official said.

It is not the first time a Saudi monarch has backed a controversial reform against domestic opposition.

King Faisal, who introduced television in the 1960s and was eventually assassinated, insisted on introducing education for girls.

Today, Saudi women graduates outnumber their male counterparts.

BBC News - London 2012 Olympics: Saudis allow women to compete
 
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I just got the news from here and WOOOhOOOOO That is why King Abdullah is awesome. And that is why we LOVE him.

YESSSSS. Now Saudi women have to go and kick a$$. Suddenly I feel the urge to watch the Olympics this year :D
 
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I just got the news from here and WOOOhOOOOO That is why King Abdullah is awesome. And that is why we LOVE him.

YESSSSS. Now Saudi women have to go and kick a$$. Suddenly I feel the urge to watch the Olympics this year :D

Come down Mosa - We will make you most welcome. The Olympic torch went through our village today and the whole country is betting into the spirit of the games. Will indeed be nice to see Saudi women involved - great move.
 
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I think King Abdullah is going a bit too fast now. He should slow down a little. If the Clerics get upset they will start strapping young people with bomb belts in no time. They did that in 1979 and they did that in 2005, and I am pretty sure they won't hesitate to do it again.

Anyways this news really made my day. If you want to know how advanced a nation is look at its women.

Come down Mosa - We will make you most welcome. The Olympic torch went through our village today and the whole country is betting into the spirit of the games. Will indeed be nice to see Saudi women involved - great move.

Dude I have Hospital training this month and some days I have 24 hours shifts and two 36 hours ones. :( well keep me posted will ya?
 
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I just got the news from here and WOOOhOOOOO That is why King Abdullah is awesome. And that is why we LOVE him.

YESSSSS. Now Saudi women have to go and kick a$$. Suddenly I feel the urge to watch the Olympics this year :D

Ye rite:


By ELLEN KNICKMEYER in Riyadh and IMAN DAWOUD in London

Human-rights activists on Tuesday challenged Saudi Arabia's commitment to fielding women athletes at the Olympics, after it emerged that the equestrian deemed the best prospect to be the Saudis' first female competitor had been disqualified this month.

Dalma Rushdi Malhas competed in the Singapore 2010 Youth Olympic Games.

The development left open the possibility that Saudi Arabia would remain the sole global holdout on including women when the summer Games open in London on July 27.

Dalma Rushdi Malhas, a 20-year-old equestrian, had missed a June 17 qualifying deadline because of an injury to her horse, the International Equestrian Federation said Monday, one day after Saudi Arabia announced its national Olympics committee would "oversee participation of female participants who qualify."

"It is 100% the case they knew she couldn't compete when they made the announcement," said Minky Worden of Human Rights Watch, one of the international organizations that have called for Saudi Arabia to be banned from the London Olympics if the country declines to send women athletes.

The Saudi announcement "was total spin for the West," Ms. Worden said by telephone from the U.S. "But on the other hand, it pins them down to finding a woman," she said. With the Olympics a month away, "the Saudis should be on a bit of a desperate search" right now, she added.

One alternative, said Ms. Worden, whose focus is human rights in Olympic events, was Saudi Arabia could field a less-trained woman in a sport such as track, which requires less-specialized training for those athletes who are there more to participate rather than compete. Olympic officials refer to those entrants, typified by swimmer Eric "the Eel" Moussambani of Equatorial Guinea in the 2000 Olympics, as "universality slots."

A Saudi woman might also carry the national flag at the opening, she suggested.

Efforts to reach the head of Saudi Arabia's Olympic Committee, Prince Nawaf bin Faisal, through calls to his office, home and international mobile phone weren't successful Tuesday. This spring, Prince Nawaf said he did "not endorse female participation of Saudi Arabia at the present time in the Olympics."

Calls to the Saudi Embassy in London, which issued the statement Sunday night, weren't answered Tuesday afternoon.

In an email, an International Olympic Committee representative said Tuesday that international Olympics officials "are still in discussion with the Saudi Arabian Olympic Committee to ensure the participation of Saudi women at the Games in London in accordance with the rules."

Saudi Arabia, Brunei and Qatar had been the three nations not to send women to the 2008 Games. This summer, Brunei is sending a female hurdler, while Qatar is sending three in shooting, swimming and track.

No name of any other possible Saudi entrant had been put forward by Tuesday. The IEF said it believed there were "a number of other female athletes" under consideration.

Saudi Arabia, which follows one of the stricter interpretations of Islam, bars women from driving and public sports competition, and requires them to have male guardians throughout their lives. Girls' schools aren't authorized to have girls sports, although Education Minister Prince Faisal bin Abdullah told The Wall Street Journal in May that he expected girls' physical education classes to be implemented "soon."

While Saudi King Abdullah has said he sees no harm in women driving and has supported expanding women's rights in other areas, supporters often argue that concern over a possible backlash by religious conservatives slows the pace of modernization.

Saudi women activists have called for women to take to the wheel on Friday, in a second annual driving protest. Saudi courts and other government ministries had ignored petitions and lawsuits asking for approval of women driving, said Manal al Sharif, who in 2011 was jailed after posting on YouTube a video of herself driving.

Sunday's Saudi announcement on women in the Olympics was "to make people happy out there," internationally, Ms. Al Sharif said. "Not for us."

Saudi women taking part in the Olympics would be good, but "it isn't one of those things we're crying out for," she said. What Saudi women want is "basic rights," she said.

Activists Press Saudis on Women in Olympics - WSJ.com
 
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