FIFA ban on hijab rejected by Australian clubs

Iranian girls footballFootball clubs fear that a decision by the sport’s world governing body to ban Islamic head scarves will trickle down to the local level. The Iran girls’ football team has been kicked out of the Youth Olympic Games because FIFA ruled that wearing a hijab was not in accordance with laws of the game relating to on-field equipment.

The president of Lakemba Sport and Recreation Club, Jamal Rifi, said:

“It’s extremely disappointing, especially because we’re trying to encourage local females to play sport, head scarf or no head scarf. It’s a smack in the face for all the hard work we have been doing. It’s not an occupational hazard and it’s definitely not a sporting hazard. The number of Muslim girls playing soccer at an elite level is already very few. To restrict these few females achieving at a high level, it’s very demoralising.”

The number of girls’ football teams in the club has risen from one to five in the past four years, which Dr Rifi said was a direct result of opening the sport up to players “from all religions, races and cultures”. Two girls playing at state level had the potential to represent Australia, he said.

“It is going to trickle down and will give justification to local associations to use that excuse at the grassroots level.”

FIFA’s rules state players may not wear jewellery or dangerous headgear such as hair clips, and that “basic compulsory equipment must not have any political, religious or personal statements”. Football Federation Australia’s and Football NSW’s interpretation of the rules allow hijabs to be worn if they are made from a special elastic material.

The chief executive of Blacktown and District Soccer Football Association, Jack Taylor, said the ruling was ”bullshit”. He hoped Football NSW and the FFA would take little notice of it. “Our numbers are growing because of the way we’ve made all women welcome. To say, ‘Sorry, you can’t play football because you’re wearing a hijab,’ is really discriminatory.”

Sydney Morning Herald, 7 April 2010

Islamophobe attacks Hindu shopkeeper

A pig’s trotter has been thrown in the face of a horrified Wakefield shopkeeper. Fagu Patel was with her children Sai, seven, and Ram, four, at the counter in the shop she runs with husband Manish in Stanley, Wakefield, when the attack happened.

The couple say they have suffered eight years of racist abuse at Reehal’s Off Licence and News on Rooks Nest Road. Mr Patel, 38, said: “Before it was always verbal abuse or antisocial behaviour – but this is just too far. I heard a scream and saw my wife fall backwards. The pig’s foot slapped her straight in the face and knocked her sideways.”

Mrs Patel said her family are Hindus, but added: “He probably didn’t know we are not Muslim but he must have done it thinking we were.”

Yorkshire Evening Post, 3 April 2010

Let’s have no double standards over EDL, says Salma Yaqoob

Salma Yaqoob on the English Defence League:

“Yesterday’s EDL protest in Dudley exposed their true face. Tired of political speeches, many of the racists turned to fighting each other, then the police, before breaking through police lines and heading towards the Unite Against Fascism event. Fortunately the police were able to contain the rampaging thugs before they were able to cause serious damage or injury.

“The EDL mobilised at least 1,000 people in support of a hate-filled agenda of attacks on Islam and Muslims. They carried Islamaphobic placards and chanted ‘If they build a f**g mosque, burn it down’. This is a direct call for racist violence.

“I am quite sure that if gangs of Muslims were maurading through our town centres threatening to burn down churches that special laws would be passed, task forces established, and people prosecuted.

“Let us not have double standards. The EDL are seeking to incite violence against the Muslim community and undermine community relations. They should feel the full force of the law for so doing.”

FIFA bans Iranian women footballers from wearing hijab

FIFA banned the Iranian women’s football team wearing hijab from participating in the inaugural Youth Olympic Games (YOG) which will be held from August 14 to 26 in Singapore. FIFA at first invited the Iranian team to take part in the games but unexpectedly decided to forbid wearing hijab in the games.

Mehr News, 3 April 2010

See also “Iran Calls for Muslim protest against FIFA ban on Islamic code of dressing”, FARS, 3 April 2010

EDL riot in Dudley

EDL Dudley2

Violent clashes broke out on Saturday between riot police and right-wing protesters. About 2,000 members of the English Defence League (EDL) descended on Dudley town centre in the West Midlands to demonstrate against plans for a new mosque.

Some of the protesters broke out of a pen in a car park, breaking down metal fences and throwing the metal brackets at officers, who were armed with riot shields and batons.

Members of the demonstration started fighting their own stewards who were trying to calm them down as they attacked the fences penning them in.

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Anti-racists hold successful carnival in Dudley town centre as EDL thugs clash with police

Ladies and Gentlemen, Mr Weyman Bennett.Over 1,000 people gathered in Dudley town centre on Saturday to attend Unite Against Fascism’s “One Dudley Many Cultures” carnival against racism. The event was set up to celebrate Dudley’s multi-racial society and oppose the presence of the racist English Defence League who had threatened to descend on the town for an anti-Muslim rally that day.

The UAF event was a great success, featuring speakers including the Bishop of Dudley, local Muslim activists, trade unionists and anti-racists. People from all Dudley’s communities attended, together with people from around the country who had come to show their solidarity with Dudley’s Muslim population and their opposition to the EDL’s thugs and bigots.

In contrast, the EDL were marched to a disused car park on the edge of town. There were several violent clashes as they attempted to break through police lines to run riot through the town. Witnesses describe hearing several vile anti-Muslim chants from the EDL, including: “If you build your f—king mosque, we’ll burn it down.”

Sabby Dhalu, joint secretary of UAF, said: “Today’s events in Dudley showed the real face of the EDL. They are a group of organised fascist football hooligans looking for trouble, who broke past heavily policed lines. This was is in contrast to the peaceful celebration organised by UAF, the Dudley Borough Interfaith Network and local communities.

“The EDL were trying to provoke a reaction. They didn’t get one. Over a hundred of them were contained by riot police in the vicinity of the UAF event in order to prevent them from attacking people leaving the antifascist rally. It is high time these fascist demonstrations were banned, and if the law prevents that then the goverment must take action to introduce new legislation.”

Weyman Bennett, joint secretary of UAF, said: “Today was a success for anti-racists and anti-fascists. The EDL were forced to huddle in a car park on the edge of town. They showed their true colours when they unsuccessfully tried to break out and run riot. In contrast UAF and local anti-racist groups mounted a powerful show of unity against the EDL and their friends in the Nazi BNP.

“The policing of today’s events in Dudley stands in sharp contrast to tactics used in Bolton two weeks ago. There the police marched the EDL into the centre of town and attacked the anti-racist protest. In Dudley the EDL were not allowed into the town centre and the anti-racist protest was allowed to go ahead unmolested. The authorities should take note when policing future such events.”

UAF press release, 3 April 2010

Update:  See also Birmingham Mail, 4 April 2010

EDL placards Dudley

Muslim prayer room is against secular values claims City University

City University students at prayer

Some Muslim students at City University in London are praying in the street in a row over prayer room facilities. The university says it goes against its philosophy to provide a room for just Islamic students.

“We felt that the provision of a dedicated prayer facility to a sub-section of our Islamic students did not fit with our university’s values,” said Professor Julius Weinberg, who is the acting vice-chancellor at City University.

“We’re a secular organisation. Our university values statement says that we will not discriminate and having a dedicated prayer room actually went fundamentally against the core values of the organisation.”

BBC News, 1 April 2010

Muslims ‘provoked violence’ by praying in Cordoba cathedral

Cordoba2

A confrontation between Muslim tourists and guards employed by the Roman Catholic bishop at the world-famous Cordoba cathedral saw two people arrested and two guards injured last night.

Trouble broke out when the visitors knelt to pray in the building, a former mosque turned into a Christian cathedral in the 13th century, where a local bishop, Demetrio Fernández, recently insisted that a ban on Muslim prayers must remain.

Half a dozen members of a group of more than 100 Muslims from Austria had started praying among the marble columns and coloured arches of the vast building when security guards ordered them to stop.

“They provoked in a pre-planned fashion what was a deplorable episode of violence,” the bishop’s office said in a statement.

Guardian, 2 April 2010

See also the Times, 2 April 2010