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Women defy strict rules to play football in Somalia

March 22, 2018 00:00:00


MOGADISHU: Somali football player of Golden Girls Football Centre, Somalia's first female soccer club, attending her training session at the Toyo stadium here recently — AFP

MOGADISHU, Mar 21 (AFP): Shortly after sunrise, a group of young women arrives at a football pitch in Mogadishu, where they shrug off their hijabs-some changing underneath the billowing veil-to reveal their team kit.

Young Somali men stand nearby, some disapproving but all watching closely, as the women jog up and down, dribble a worn-out ball between colourful cones and do sit-ups, less than 200 metres (656 feet) from a heavily guarded security checkpoint.

The sight of young women playing football is highly unusual in Somalia, due to societal pressures as well as fear of Al-Shabaab.

The Al-Qaeda linked Islamist group launches regular attacks in Mogadishu and considers forms of entertainment, such as football, to be evil, worse still if women are involved.

"It is obvious that we are scared despite the fact that we put on heavy clothes over our shorts and T-shirts (until) we get to the pitch. It is very difficult to walk normally with sports clothes-we never wear sports clothing in society," said Hibaq Abdukadir, 20, one of the footballers.

She is among 60 girls, who have signed up to train at the Golden Girls Centre in Mogadishu, Somalia's first female soccer club.

Mohamed Abukar Ali, the 28-year-old co-founder of the centre, said he was inspired to create the club after he realised that Somalia had no female footballers.

"We are... trying to make these girls the first Somali female football professionals," he said. However this is not an easy task.

"When the girls have to attend training sessions, we have to organise to pick them up and bring them here and back home after the session because they are girls and we think about their security," said Ali.


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