[Badgirlz-list] donne afghane alle olimpiadi

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Author: pussycat@bastardi.net
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Subject: [Badgirlz-list] donne afghane alle olimpiadi

>From www.bbc.co.uk



Afghan women's Olympic dream


Friba Rezihi lived and trained in the Palestinian territories for five years
Two athletes set to become the first women ever to represent Afghanistan
at the Olympic Games have told the BBC about their hopes for the
competition.
Robina Muqimyar, who will run in the 100 metres, and Friba Rezihi, who
will compete in judo, have been preparing for the Games on the Greek
island of Lesbos, ahead of their debut at the games in Athens in August.

Afghanistan was suspended from the Olympic movement in 1999.

"I'm really happy to be participating in these games," Muqimyar told BBC
World Service's Everywoman programme.

"I'm really happy that for the first time I will be in these games and I
can raise the Afghan flag worldwide."

'The time to dream'

Rezihi said she was thankful to the Greek government for giving the pair
permission to train in the country.

"It's a big opportunity for us and our people, and we will take advantage
of this opportunity," she added.

"I want to be a role model for my country."


The Games will begin on 13 August
She added that she was not aiming to get a medal - which would be highly
unlikely - but to "show people that it's a good chance and it's a good
thing".

"It's like a gold medal for us to participate as Afghan women after a
long, long time," she added.

Rezihi, who lived in the Palestinian territories between 1995 and 2000,
only returned to Afghanistan after the country's hardline Taleban rulers
fell.

She took up judo on the advice of her coach.

Both athletes were prevented from training under the Taleban. The national
stadium was used to stage executions and floggings.

"We couldn't do any sort of sport. I couldn't feel secure enough to go
out," Muqimyar said.

"The moment the Taleban went out of Afghanistan we started again... before
this we couldn't do it.

"In the Taleban's time, we couldn't even dream about it. Now the time is
our dream has started."

Conservative opposition

Although the Taleban have gone, there are still a number of strongly
conservative mullahs in the country's interim government that have voiced
opposition to Afghanistan's athletes competing in the Olympics.


I'm not scared of anything at the moment

Robina Muqimyar
Abdul Matin Mutasem Bilal, a mullah at Kabul's Abu Bakar Sidiq Mosque, has
argued that they cannot attend because the strict Islamic dress code
requires that all but a woman's hands, feet and face be covered.

"When I tell you that her neighbour shouldn't see all her face, how should
thousands of foreigners, non-Muslims, in a big stadium be allowed to see
her body?" he said.

Zia Dashti, the Afghan Olympic Committee's vice president, has said that
the woman competing on the track will be required to wear tracksuits and
not show their legs.

Muqimyar said she would "wear whatever they tell me to wear".

But she added that she did not see too many problems: "I'm not scared of
anything at the moment.

"I'm really happy and dreaming of going back home to being welcomed by my
own people."

And she added that she would be channelling her anger at being prevented
from participating for so long into her performance.

"I learned from the Taleban how to be oppressed," she said.

"I'm going to teach people how to struggle against them, how to learn and
how to get whatever you want in life."