Google – AFP, 5 May 2013
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Saudi
Arabia's Wojdan Shaherkani (L) competes at the London 2012
Olympic Games on
August 3, 2012 (AFP/File, Toshifumi Kitamura)
|
RIYADH —
Saudi Arabia has given girls at private schools the right to play sport, the
education ministry said Sunday, in a step aimed at easing restrictions on women
in the ultra-conservative kingdom.
The
ministry directive published in Saudi newspapers says that private schools for
girls have been told to "put into effect a number of rules to regulate
sports".
The measure
appears to have left out the majority of students at state schools.
The
ministry has, however, requested the schools ensure girls wear "a covering
and decent outfit" for sport activities in "suitable areas".
It also
demanded that female Saudi coaches get the priority in employment at such
facilities.
The
ministry pointed out that some private schools were already offering physical
education, but without any regulations to follow.
The issue
of Saudi women in sport came under the spotlight during the 2012 London Olympic
Games, when the Muslim kingdom bowed to pressure and sent female athletes to
compete for the first time.
At that
time, Human Rights Watch said that despite the participation of two Saudi women
at the Olympics, millions of women in the Gulf state were still banned from
sports.


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