Google – AFP, 3 March 2014
Karachi —
Pakistani and Afghan sports officials have hailed a decision by football's
world governing body to lift a ban on head coverings, saying this will allow
more Islamic girls to take up the sport.
FIFA on
Saturday officially authorised the wearing of head covers for religious
purposes during matches, allowing women who wear a veil in everyday life to
cover their heads during matches and men to wear turbans.
Rukhsana
Rashid, the captain of the all-women's Dia club in Pakistan's southern province
of Sindh, said Monday the move would help the sport to grow.
"I
want to pay my gratitude to FIFA because this will allow female players from
remote areas to take up the game because their parents were not allowing them
without their head covered," she said.
Saadia
Shaikh, secretary of the Sindh's women's football association, added it was a
"very good decision for female players from Islamic countries".
Former
military ruler General Pervez Musharraf cleared the way for women's events at
national level in 2005.
In all,
nine national women's football championships have been held and the country now
boasts 22 women's football clubs with around 400 players.
But male
spectators unaccompanied by female relatives are banned from entering the
stadium.
In
neighbouring Afghanistan, Mohammad Yousuf, a senior official in the Afghanistan
football federation, said the decision "shows respect to the culture and
religion of others. This is respect and tolerance and we in Afghanistan welcome
this."
"If it
was not allowed, this could be a problem for Afghan women and for the women in
the Islamic world in general," he added.
The
Taliban, who ruled Afghanistan from 1996-2001, allowed only men's football but
sometimes used the national football ground in Kabul to carry out public executions
before matches.
Pakistan's
women's team will start a training camp next month to tune up for friendly home
and away matches against Qatar.
Pakistan
will host the South Asian Football Federation cup in December this year, with
neighbouring countries like Afghanistan, India, Bangladesh and Nepal expected
to feature. Both men and women will compete.
![]() |
Picture taken on November 30, 2006 shows Jordan midfielder
Abeer Al Nahar at a training session at the Al-Arabi Football Stadium in Doha (AFP/File, Toshifumi Kitamura) |
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