French lawmaker seeks head scarf ban for women soccer players

French lawmaker seeks head scarf ban for women soccer players
Updated 07 July 2012
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French lawmaker seeks head scarf ban for women soccer players

French lawmaker seeks head scarf ban for women soccer players

PARIS: A French MP urged the government yesterday to ban the Islamic headscarf for women soccer players, a day after world footballing authorities said the hijab could be worn on the pitch.
The International Football Association Board (IFAB), custodians of the rules of football, on Thursday overturned its 2007 ban on the Islamic headscarf, a garment it had argued was unsafe and increased the risk of neck injuries.
Critics said the ban promoted inequality at the highest level of the world’s most popular game.
Iran, the Asian Football Confederation and Jordan’s Prince Ali Bin Al-Hussein, who is also FIFA vice president, were at the forefront of the fight against the ban.
French lawmaker Gerald Darmanin wrote to Sports Minister Valerie Fourneyron asking that Paris denounce the U-turn “in the name of universal and republican values.”
He also called for a “clear signal to ban headscarves in football fields in our country,” adding that sports “must continue to promote equality of the sexes.”
The wearing of the Islamic veil, limited historically to conservative Gulf monarchies, has gained ground, including in sports, since the 1979 Iranian rvolution and the creation of an Islamic republic.
Use of the veil spread quickly as Islamist movements grew in the wake of last year’s Arab Spring uprisings.
France has outraged many Muslims with a law against full face-covering veils which came into force in April 2011.
n FROM: Agence France Presse