Even as the International Cricket Council continues its head in the sand approach to the clear and present denial of safe access to sport for women and young girls since the Taliban took back control of strife-torn Afghanistan, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is having none of it.
The IOC warned Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers on Tuesday that allowing women and young girls safe access to sport was a condition for the country’s representation at the 2024 Paris Games.
Reuters reports that the IOC executive board expressed “serious concern” and “strongly condemned” restrictions on women after a meeting in Lausanne where it received a full report on the Olympic and sports movement in Afghanistan.
“The specific modalities for the participation of the Afghan NOC delegation and team in the Olympic Games Paris 2024…will depend on the progress made in relation to the fundamental issue of safe access to sport for women and young girls in the country,” it stated, without setting any deadlines.
Teams representing Afghanistan must include female athletes living in Afghanistan as well as abroad, the board said, and women should be represented in governing bodies and administration., the IOC has made clear
Human Rights Watch called on Monday for the IOC to suspend Afghanistan until women and girls could again play sport in the country, Reuters further reports.
“The IOC should not take a day longer to remove the Taliban from the Olympic movement, strip their status, and halt the funding the IOC provides,” said Minky Worden, HRW’s director of global initiatives.
The IOC said direct support will continue to be provided to Afghan athletes, where possible, to help them prepare for the Olympics.