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Saudi shura urges sport for girls in schools

Riyadh, April 9, 2014

Saudi authorities have been asked by the Shura Counicl to consider lifting a state school ban on sports for girls, according to the official SPA news agency.
 
Saudi Arabia included women in its Olympic team for the first time only two years ago.
 
SPA said Saudi Arabia's appointed Shoura Council, which advises the government on policy, had asked the education ministry to look into including sports for girls in state-run schools with the proviso they should conform to sharia rules on dress and gender segregation.
 
Although it would not become law until the ministry and cabinet approved the idea, the council's vote represented a further step of progress for Saudi Arabian women.
 
The world's top oil exporter has maintained an official ban on sports classes for girls in state schools under pressure from religious conservatives.
 
A ban on sports in private girls schools was officially lifted last year, though some of those schools had already been providing physical education classes for girls for years.
 
In 2012 Saudi Arabia included women in its Olympic team for the first time, a move that won support from many of its citizens but also prompted some to abuse the morals of the two female athletes, a runner and judoka, on social media.
 
Although the council's decisions are not binding, they are seen as important in Saudi Arabia because it is the only official forum in which new laws and government policy on sensitive social issues are publicly discussed.
 
A year ago King Abdullah appointed 30 women to the 150-member chamber for the first time.
 
His moves to make it easier for women to work and study alongside men, and to promote more tolerant views of other religions have faced opposition from powerful clerics and their many supporters, who fear the kingdom is losing its Islamic values in favour of Western ideas.
 
ALLIANCE WITH CLERICS
 
SPA quoted deputy chairman of the shoura council, Fahad Al-Hamad, as saying that the council had heard supporting and dissenting views on the topic during the session before the chamber adopted the decision.
 
Members who supported the decision pointed to an increase in obesity-related illnesses in Saudi society particularly among women and an increase in jobs if physical education programmes were adopted for girls.
 
Those who opposed the decision said there were many schools which were not equipped infrastructurally to allow for sports. Some members also questioned whether physical education lessons had actually decreased obesity in boys.
 
"The (education affairs) committee saw .... that ratifying this decision does not contradict sharia law, pointing out that a previous fatwa (religious ruling) ... allowed for sports for women in general," SPA reported on Tuesday. - Reuters



Tags: Saudi | School | Sport | Girls |

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