Saudi Arabia's Sara Al-Attar, right, starts her women's 800m
round 1 heat during the London 2012 Olympic Games at the Olympic Stadium
.
The Saudi Olympic Committee has
approved four female Saudi athletes to compete as part of the
conservative Gulf kingdom's team at the Rio Olympics, a spokesman said
on Sunday.
Sara Al-Attar, Lubna Al-Omair, Cariman Abu Al-Jadail and Wujud Fahmi
will become only the second group of women Olympians to represent Saudi
Arabia, where women are barred from driving and are subject to a
restrictive male guardianship system.
But the historic decision was complicated by the kingdom's thorny
gender politics, as the official announcement of the Olympic team named
only the seven men who will compete.
The announcements of the names of the male and female team members
were made separately given the sensitivities regarding gender
segregation and women's athletics in Saudi Arabia, said Saudi Olympic
Committee Chief Executive Hosam Alqurashi.
The four women will be given wildcard entries so they can compete
without meeting formal qualification standards, a spokesman said.
Saudia Arabia entered two women under a similar arrangement for the
2012 Olympics in London in what was a symbolic first for the oil-rich
Islamic nation.
Attar is a veteran of the London games, where she ran in the 800
metres. She will be joined in Rio by another runner, Abu Al-Jadail, who
will run in the 100 metres. Omair will participate in fencing, while
Fahmi will be in the under-52 kg judo event.
Women in Saudi Arabia face significant hurdles to practice sport.
They must wear head-to-toe garments in public, observe strict rules on
gender segregation and obtain permission from a male guardian to travel,
study or marry.
Women's gyms are not currently eligible for licences, making them
scarce in the kingdom. Saudi Arabia's recently announced package of
economic reforms set out the licensing of women's "sports halls" as a
goal to be achieved by 2020.
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