Taliban don't recognise women on Afghan Olympic team: sport official
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Afghanistan's Taliban government does not recognise the three
female athletes who will represent the country at the Paris Olympic Games this
month, a spokesman for their sports department said.
The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has invited a squad of
six Afghan athletes -- three women and three men -- in consultation with
Afghanistan's largely exiled national Olympic committee.
"Only three athletes are representing Afghanistan," said
Atal Mashwani, the spokesman of the Taliban government's sports directorate,
referring to the male competitors.
"Currently, in Afghanistan girls' sports have been stopped.
When girls' sport isn't practiced, how can they go on the national team?"
he told AFP.
All three of the women and two of the male athletes are living
outside Afghanistan.
The only one training in the country is a judo fighter, whilst his
squad mates will feature in athletics and swimming.
The IOC said it had not consulted Taliban officials about the team
and they were not invited to the games.
Spokesman Mark Adams last month confirmed Afghanistan's national
Olympic committee -- including the president and secretary-general who are both
living in exile -- remain "its sole interlocutors for the preparation and
participation of the Afghan team".
But Afghan committee CEO Dad Mohammad Payenda Akhtari, who is
still in the country, said whilst female athletes were organised abroad, his
committee coordinated with Taliban authorities over the male ones.
Mashwani claimed the government was supporting them with training
and scholarships.
"We only take the responsibility for three male athletes
participating in the Olympics," he told AFP.
The participants will compete under the black, red and green flag
of the old Western-backed government which crumbled after the withdrawal of US
troops three years ago.
Since surging back to power in 2021, the Taliban government has
enforced curbs squeezing women out of sport as well as secondary schools and
universities.
The United Nations has described the restrictions as "gender
apartheid".
The IOC banned Afghanistan from the games in 1999, during the
first period of Taliban rule between 1996 and 2001 when women were also barred
from sport.
Afghanistan was reinstated after the Taliban were ousted by the
post-9/11 invasion, but the Paris games mark the first summer Olympics since
their return.
This
time the IOC has taken a different approach -- approving the Afghan team under
a system ensuring all 206 nations are represented, in cases where athletes
wouldn't otherwise qualify.


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