The Guardian Australia

‘No one should be excluded’: Australia’s Tina Rahimi hits out at Olympic hijab ban

- Kieran Pender in Paris

Australian boxer Tina Rahimi has hit out at France’s hijab ban, which prevents French athletes participat­ing in certain sports at the Olympics from wearing religious head scarfs.

“Women have the right to choose how they want to dress,” Rahimi, who took part in the Paris 2024 opening ceremony on Friday, wrote in a post on Instagram. “With or without hijab. I choose to wear the hijab as a part of my religion and I am proud to do so.”

Rahimi is the first female Muslim boxer to represent Australia at the Olympics. The 28-year-old, from Bankstown in south-west Sydney, wears long sleeves and a hijab under a protective headgear in competitio­n.

“You shouldn’t have to choose between your beliefs/religion or your sport,” added Rahimi. “This is what the French athletes are forced to do.”

France’s hijab ban only applies to French athletes competing at the Games – it does not apply to visiting competitor­s. The ban applies to sports including football, basketball, volleyball and boxing, and covers all levels of competitio­n, including amateur events.

“No matter how you look or dress, what your ethnicity is or what religion you follow,” Rahimi said in her post. “We all come together to achieve that one dream. To compete and to win. No one should be excluded. Discrimina­tion is not welcome in sport, specifical­ly in the Olympics and what it stands for.”

In June, a coalition of groups including Human Rights Watch and Amnesty Internatio­nal wrote to the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee condemning the ban and urging IOC interventi­on.

“The bans imposed by the French sports authoritie­s are discrimina­tory and prevent Muslim athletes who decide to wear the hijab from exercising their human right to play sport without discrimina­tion of any kind,” the letter said. “The bans also fly in the face of the human rights requiremen­ts for host countries and the IOC Strategic Framework on Human Rights, as well as being antithetic­al to the fundamenta­l principles of Olympism.”

Ahead of the opening ceremony, French sprinter Sounkamba Sylla was at risk of not participat­ing due to her headscarf; at the last minute, a compromise was reached whereby Sylla covered her hair with a cap, allowing her to join the ceremony.

France has a long history of seeking to regulate or ban the wearing of religious items, politicall­y justified in the name of laïcité (secularism).

Rahimi will make her Olympic debut on Friday in the women’s featherwei­ght division. She won bronze for Australia at the 2022 Commonweal­th Games in Birmingham, and is the reigning Pacific Games champion.

 ?? Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images ?? Tina Rahimi, the first Muslim woman to represent Australia in Olympic boxing, has hit out at France’s hijab ban.
Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images Tina Rahimi, the first Muslim woman to represent Australia in Olympic boxing, has hit out at France’s hijab ban.

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