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FIFA examining claims of sexual and physical abuse on Afghanistan women’s team

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Fifa is examining allegations that members of the Afghanistan national women’s team were sexually and physically abused by men from the country’s football federation, including its president, Keramuudin Karim.

The claims have prompted the team’s principal sponsor, Hummel, to cut ties with the Afghan federation (AFF) and call for new leadership. The Danish sportswear manufacturer said it was “presented with strong allegations of severe mental, physical, sexual and equal-rights abuse of the female players by male AFF officials”.


Senior figures associated with the Afghanistan women’s team have told the Guardian that abuse took place inside the country, including at the federation’s headquarters, and at a training camp in Jordan in February 2018.

Khalida Popal, a former head of the women’s football department at the AFF, who was forced to flee the country in 2016 and seek asylum in Denmark, has spoken to the Guardian, together with the players Shabnam Mobarez and Mina Ahmadi and the head coach, Kelly Lindsey, about the ordeal of players within the country and their frustrations with a system that, they feel, has failed to protect them.

The AFF has not responded to Guardian requests for comment.

Fifa confirmed it was investigating the claims and a source at world football’s governing body told the Guardian it had been working with the United Nations on some players’ safety.

The source said: “Fifa has been fully aware of the situation in Afghanistan and have been working hard to secure the safety of the girls. They have been working very discreetly with those involved, given the sensitive nature of the accusations and danger to life posed, since March to pull together evidence for a formal investigation and have brought in the UN – such is the extent of their concern for the girls still in the country and the need to bring in an organisation that can make political and legal interventions outside of Fifa’s abilities.”

In its statement Fifa said: “The serious subjects mentioned are being looked into by Fifa. As some aspects of these allegations involve sensitive topics linked to the protection of those involved, we have sought support from relevant parties who willingly offered their support to Fifa. The matter is currently being addressed in a ‘do no harm way’ towards the victims.”

Popal said that in the course of an investigation she has carried out into the allegations she heard claims of physical abuse, sexual abuse, death threats and rape. “It was very difficult for us, living in the country, to talk about these things because these are very powerful guys. If a player from Afghanistan raised a voice they can get killed,” she said.

Having fled the country two years ago, Popal organised national team training camps in Jordan, Japan and the UAE which have brought together players from inside and outside Afghanistan.

She told the Guardian that for the first such gathering, in Jordan in February, the players arriving from Afghanistan were accompanied by two men.

“They sent two male representatives, going under the title of ‘head of women’s football’ and ‘assistant coach’,” she said. “They were bullying and harassing the girls, particularly the ones from Afghanistan because they knew they wouldn’t speak up. I confronted them, told them they can’t do that and I’d make a complaint.

“It continued. These guys were calling on the rooms of the players and sleeping with the girls. AFF staff members would say to girls that they could get them on the team list and would pay them £100 a month if they would say yes to everything. They were pushing and forcing the girls. Coercing them.”

She said players reported to her what was going on and told her she needed to get it stopped. Popal said: “I phoned the president and said: ‘You should stop this. If you don’t stop it I cannot stop the girls from going to the media with their stories.’ He was promising that he would take serious action. He said to just keep playing football and we should keep it quiet until they come back and then they [the men] will be punished.”

According to the American head coach Lindsey, the two male officials alleged to have abused players in Jordan “were promoted and moved to other areas within the AFF”.

Popal said that shortly after the camp in Jordan ended “nine players, who are based in Afghanistan, some of our best players, were kicked off the national team, accused of being lesbians”.

It was, she claimed: “Because some of them were going to talk to the media. The president [privately] labelled them lesbians to silence them from speaking out about the sexual abuse in Jordan and abuses by coaches. He beat one of the girls with a snooker cue. He beat the player and said she was a lesbian and she was kicked out of the federation.

“If they spoke out, no one would listen to them because being accused of being lesbian or gay in Afghanistan is a topic you don’t speak about and puts you and your family in a lot of danger.”

Popal said that when she learned that nine players had been sidelined she started an investigation and that multiple allegations were made regarding Karim, a former governor of Panjshir province and chief of staff in the ministry of defence before he took over the presidency of the AFF in 2004.

“While I was doing the investigation with these players I found out the huge extent of the abuse, sexually, mentally, physically, happening from the president himself,” she said.

She claimed: “Not only that, he has a room inside his office that is a bedroom with a bed. The doors of his office are fingerprint recognition, so when players go in they can’t get out without the fingerprint of the president.

“I tried to search for the girls. I found some of the girls that were sexually abused, and physically abused if they said no. The federation would make an excuse to get rid of the player so that if they came out [and spoke publicly], it would look like they just upset about being kicked off the team. That investigation took me half a year and there was physical abuse, sexual abuse, death threats and rape cases.”

Lindsey said they tried to raise the issue with the Asian Football Confederation. “They basically said: ‘We can’t speak to you about this because you’re not a member association, we need your president or your general secretary to speak with us.’”

An AFC spokesperson told the Guardian: “The AFC is looking into the various media reports which have been published and the complaints that some Afghanistan players have made on social media. There have been no reports of any sexual abuse to the AFC from any Afghanistan player.”

A further development, which hardened the determination of the players to get their stories out, was the arrival of women’s national team contracts that those involved describe as “aggressive,” “one-way” and about “silencing” players. Those that did not sign were kicked off the team. Mobarez tweeted that the contract prevented her from being paid for playing, limited their ability to get sponsorship elsewhere or pursue other promotional ventures, and removed mediation in disciplinary proceedings.

“I think this contract is very inhumane because it’s taking away my basic human rights away from me, and my rights as a female,” Mobarez, the captain, who plays in Denmark, said. “I don’t know any of the male players who have had to sign anything like this. I see no equality.”

Ahmadi said: “It empowers us more and makes us more motivated to spread the message and accomplish great things. We all still have the same goal. They can’t break us.”

Hummel said it had “clear documentation of breach of contract as well as the fact that AFF leadership has been aware of the allegations since February this year without taking actions or informing sponsors. The documentation of unacceptable behaviour includes, but is not limited to, a new contract stripping player of several basic human rights.”


https://www.theguardian.com/footbal...sexual-physical-abuse-afghanistan-womens-team
 
Serious allegations and brings into question nature of Women's sport in societies which are already struggling with women's rights - is it too soon (and dangerous) to have a Women's football team in Afghanistan?
 
shocking to say the least. Would really hinder the progress of women sport in the country.
 
Afghan President Ashraf Ghani on Tuesday called for an investigation into claims of sexual abuse against the national women's football team, calling the allegations “shocking” and vowing to act immediately.

The president's call comes days after the Guardian newspaper broke a story about allegations of sexual and physical abuse of members of the women's team by male officials, including the president of the country's football federation.

“It is shocking to all Afghans. Any kind of misconduct against athletes, male and female, is not acceptable,” Ghani said after a meeting with the country's attorney general.

“I ask the attorney general to conduct a thorough investigation compliant with our legal codes into the issue,” he added.

The Guardian cited what it described as senior figures associated with the women's team who said the abuse had taken place in Afghanistan, including at the Afghanistan Football Federation (AFF) headquarters, and at a training camp in Jordan last February.

The story quoted former captain Khalida Popal — who fled the country after receiving death threats and has spoken out previously about the discrimination women face in Afghanistan — as saying male officials were “coercing” female players.

AFF Secretary General Sayed Alireza Aqazada batted away the allegations over the weekend, saying the claims were untrue. However, Hafizullah Wali Rahimi — president of Afghanistan's Olympic committee — said such allegations were not new.

“The abuse by the head of federations, trainers and sportsmen have always existed. We have had complaints in the past, and this is an undeniable fact,” Rahimi told local media on Monday.

Ghani calls for immediate action.
“Even if mere allegations cause our people to stop sending their sons and daughters to sports, we need to act immediately and comprehensively. I do not tolerate sexual abuse,” Ghani said.

“No power on Earth can abuse our children. We have to have a framework in place to mitigate such incidents in our sports federations,” he added.

Football's world governing body FIFA has also said it was looking into claims of sexual and physical abuse in the Afghan national women's team, while the Danish sportswear company Hummel announced it had cancelled a sponsorship deal with the team due to the allegations.

The attorney general's office said it had already assembled a team to investigate the issue.

Afghanistan has made strides to promote female football and launched its first all-women's football league four years ago that ran in parallel with the men's. In 2017 the female teams were sidelined by a lack of funding.

https://www.dawn.com/news/1449383/ghani-orders-probe-of-sex-abuse-on-afghan-womens-football-team
 
Not the right time to have Womens team.

Need to sort out real issues in that country before we think of playing sports. Once we have those problems fixed - we might be in a better position to play and host sports.
 
Afghan Football Chief Suspended over Allegations of Sexual Abuse

Afghanistan's attorney general has suspended five officials of the Afghan Football Federation, including the president of the organization, following allegations of sexual abuse against members of the women's national football team.

The suspensions came just days after Afghan President Ashraf Ghani ordered an investigation into the allegations that were first reported in Britain's The Guardian newspaper.

Ghani has said the allegations are "shocking to all Afghans."

"The attorney general's office has suspended . . . the president of the football federation, his deputy, the federation's secretary general, the head of goalkeepers and the head of provincial coordinators," Jamshid Rasuli, a spokesman for the attorney general, told the French news agency (AFP).

AFF Secretary-General Sayed Alireza Aqazada has strongly rejected what he said are baseless allegations. "No sexual harassment has been committed against any girl football player," he said recently.

But team members who spoke to The Guardian said abuse took place inside Afghanistan, including at the federation's headquarters, and at a training camp in Jordan last February.

The Guardian reported that players on the women's team were molested by senior figures associated with the AFF, including its president, Keramuddin Karim.

The international soccer federation, FIFA, said it has a "zero-tolerance policy" on such violations and is looking into the case, which it called "serious."

A former team captain, Khalida Popal, who now lives in Denmark, has been talking to members of the media about the alleged abuse she and her teammates suffered.

She told the New York Times recently that Karim sexually harassed women in a bedroom behind his office, trapping them inside with a door rigged so only he could open it.

Popal fled Afghanistan in 2012, but she still works with the women's team by organizing training camps outside the country's borders. She said when she organized a training camp in Jordan earlier this year, the Afghan federation sent two men as chaperones, both of whom sexually harassed the team members.

She told several media outlets that she reported to Karim the abuse she heard about in Jordan and was told the men responsible would be punished. Instead, she said, they were promoted.

Popal fled Afghanistan after receiving death threats and has spoken out previously about the discrimination facing women in her deeply conservative country.

https://www.voanews.com/a/afghan-fo...over-allegations-of-sexual-abuse/4692929.html
 
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