FortWayne.com
 
  Text size  Increase text sizeDecrease text size      
Posted on Fri. Jul. 06, 2012 - 12:01 am EDT

COMMENTARY

IOC must force Saudis’ hand

PHOTOS
 
Click on image to view.

“The practice of sport is a human right. Every individual must have the possibility of practicing sport, without discrimination of any kind and in the Olympic spirit ...”

Those are the International Olympics Committee’s own words, spelled out at the very beginning of its charter, right after the preamble, under a section known as “Fundamental Principles of Olympism.”

It’s time for the IOC to live up to them.

If Saudi Arabia won’t allow women to compete at the London Games, tell the guys who run the oil-rich kingdom they can keep the rest of their team – the men – at home, too.

No more negotiations. No more sorting out the details. This is a major issue, no less important than a stand taken by the IOC nearly a half-century ago when faced with the issue of apartheid in South Africa.

Less than a month before the 1964 Olympics – roughly the same amount of time that we stand away from the start of the London Games – the organization banned South Africa from sending a team to Tokyo because of its policy of racial discrimination. Never mind that South Africa tried to buy itself some time by offering to send a team with seven non-whites among its 62 athletes.

The IOC held firm. The ban lasted until the 1992 Barcelona Olympics, after Nelson Mandela had been freed from prison and apartheid had been dismantled.

We’ll never know exactly how much influence the IOC’s ban – and other sports-related boycotts – had on shutting down that despicable system. But rest assured, it didn’t hurt.

Now, it’s time to act again, boldly and with purpose, to fully comply with the very next principle of Olympism after the one mentioned above: “Any form of discrimination with regard to a country or a person on grounds of race, religion, politics, gender or otherwise is incompatible with belonging to the Olympic Movement.”

Seems pretty clear. If Saudi Arabia insists on remaining the last holdout against allowing women to compete, the Saudis’ invitation to Britain is revoked.

“You’ve got a single country that’s being intransigent,” said Martha Davis, a law professor at Northeastern University who specializes in women’s rights. “Certainly in the past, after years of apartheid, the Olympic bureaucracy was able to take a stand against a racist nation. Here, we’ve got a country singularly out of step with the rest of the world. It’s really time for the IOC to take a bolder stand against that.”

Saudi Arabia’s foot-dragging comes at a time when both sides of the debate over gender and religious beliefs are taking constructive steps toward a workable middle ground.

On Thursday, the rules-making panel of international soccer approved headscarves for female Muslim players, reversing a ban on the Islamic hijab that’s been enforced in FIFA competitions since 2007, supposedly for safety reasons. Last year, the international weightlifting federation reversed a similar ban, allowing athletes to compete in uniforms that cover their legs, arms and head.

Kulsoom Abdullah, an American lifter who hopes to get a wild-card berth to compete for Pakistan (where her parents were born) at the London Games, led the fight to overturn clothing restrictions in her sport. Likewise, she wants to see at least one Saudi woman competing at the Olympics.

“One would be better than nothing,” she told The Associated Press on Thursday. “Even if just one woman is sent, at least she would get some media attention and some awareness about her involvement within the Arab countries and internationally. The more women know about, the more it’s going to open some doors and some opportunities.”

IOC President Jacques Rogge seems set on a course of negotiation.

The IOC already persuaded two other nations, Qatar and Brunei, to include women on their Olympic teams for the first time, so there is clearly some benefit to talking things out.

But Rogge must make it clear to Saudi Arabia that if those details can’t be worked out, an all-male team is not an option.

“This,” Davis said, “is really a human rights issue.”

It’s also a religious issue, and that’s where things get a bit sticky. Women in Saudi Arabia are severely restricted in public life.

Abdullah, however, said religion really shouldn’t play a role in this issue.

“Going through Islamic history, there are many, many examples of strong women who were very active. Unfortunately, it has to do with the culture,” she said. “Men, because of their egos, interpret this a different way and say women shouldn’t do this for religious reasons. But I see nothing in the Quran that says women shouldn’t be strong and active. Not at all.”

The Saudis have been sending mixed signals on their intentions.

Surely, the IOC can free up a few spots for some Saudi women, no matter their competitive limitations.

So, when the jet bearing the Saudi Olympic team lands in London, there better be women on it.

If not, the IOC should send it right back where it came from. Along with a copy of the Olympic charter.


Paul Newberry is a national writer for The Associated Press. His columns appear periodically in The Journal Gazette.


Sunday
Sunday
High 89 °F
Low 66 °F
72 °F
A Few Clouds
Sponsored by Fort Wayne Monthly magazine
TODAY'S DAILY DEAL
Daily Deal
Belle Sante Medical Spa
Spring Hydrating Facial for Only $39
TODAY ONLY
$39.00
52% off!
LOCAL BUSINESS SEARCH
Local Search
FeaturedMore
Things To Do

STOCK SUMMARY
Dow 15354.40+121.18
Nasdaq 3498.965+33.722
S&P 500 1667.47+17.00
AEP 49.64+0.59
Comcast 42.64-0.23
GE 23.46+0.19
ITT Exelis 12.04+0.08
LNC 35.25+0.54
Navistar 38.25+2.03
Raytheon 66.89+1.25
SDI 15.31+0.27
Verizon 53.35+0.15
  Stock Sponsor