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French hijab ban in sports called a 'shameful moment' as it prepares to host Olympics

As the world gets ready to celebrate sport and the best athletes and coaches in the world, there is a push by Olympic organizers to emphasize gender equality at the Paris 2024 Olympics.

On March 8, 2024 (not coincidentally International Women's Day), the International Olympic Committee announced there would be complete gender parity on the field at this summer's Games.

"We are about to celebrate one of the most important moments in the history of women at the Olympic Games, and in sport overall," IOC president Thomas Bach said in a statement.

But the reality is that gender parity doesn't necessarily mean open to all women. There are a number of women who have been dreadfully left behind in all the excitement about women athletes and by the hosts who claim to be celebrating their existence.

France bans women in hijab (an Islamic headscarf) from participating in sport. As the Olympic host, France could not ban athletes from all around the world from wearing a headscarf, so they banned their own athletes instead. When this was announced last September, a spokesperson for the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights said: "No one should impose on a woman what she needs to wear, or not wear."

How can France claim to champion women when it is stripping them away from sport in a move that is blatantly opposed to the IOC's own human rights framework? The Olympic Charter states clearly: "The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set forth in this Olympic Charter shall be secured without discrimination of any kind, such as race, colour, sex, sexual orientation, language, religion, political or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth or other status." 

France claims that secularism, which is at the heart of French

Read more on cbc.ca