Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
International

US lawmakers, Sikhs disappointed at basketball body's headgear decision

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Sep, 2014 11:25 AM
    Two US lawmakers and Sikh community bodies have expressed disappointment over International Basketball Federation’s (FIBA) decision to allow athletes to wear religious headgear, such as patkas, only as part of a “trial period”.
     
    “We are deeply disappointed with FIBA. It shouldn't take two years to make what should be a simple decision to eliminate a discriminatory practice,” lone Indian American Congressman Ami Bera and fellow Democrat Joe Crowley said in a statement.
     
    “There is no evidence that turbans or religious headgear pose a threat to players, and it's time for FIBA to do what the rest of the sporting world is doing and let Sikhs play,” they said.
     
    “Rest assured, we will continue to closely monitor FIBA’s continued actions to ensure they ultimately make the right decision,” added Bera and Crowley, who is Democratic co-chair of the Congressional India Caucus.
     
    FIBA has announced that while athletes would be allowed to wear religious headgear, for a “trial period”, players would still be banned from wearing such articles of faith in international matches.
     
    FIBA also said it would wait until 2016 to make a permanent decision about religious accommodations.
     
    Two major Sikh community organisations, the Sikh Coalition and the Sikh American Legal Defence and Education Fund (SALDEF) have said they would follow-up with FIBA to understand exactly how the new rules would apply to Sikhs.
     
    The two organisations said they have already identified several major problems. For instance, since religious exceptions still cannot be granted for international matches, Sikh athletes may still be forced to remove their turbans for matches outside India.
     
    The Sikh Coalition said it believed that FIBA’s religious headcovering ban must be lifted immediately and permanently for all matches -- domestic and international -- and that FIBA should stop using bureaucracy as a pretext for discriminating against religious minorities.
     
    “Justice delayed is justice denied,” said Sapreet Kaur, executive director of the Sikh Coalition.
     
    The Sikh Coalition also urged its supporters to continue recording protest videos using the hashtags #CallFoulonFIBA and #LetSikhsPlay.
     
    Last month, Bera, Crowley and several other US House members in a letter to FIBA president urged the organisation to update its policies to stop requiring Sikhs to remove their turbans during basketball games.
     
    The letter followed an outcry over an incident involving two Sikh players who were told by referees that they must remove their turbans if they were to play in FIBA’s Asia Cup.
     
    Other sports leagues, such as Fédération Internationale de Football Association (FIFA) and the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA), allow athletes wearing turbans to participate, the lawmakers noted.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored
    The last time this happened was 37 years ago when citizens' groups stood guard outside the rooms where the boxes containing the ballots cast in the 1977 general election - after the emergency was lifted - were stored. 

    Election Special: Now, Punjab candidates stand vigil where EVMs stored

    50 injured in Meerut communal riot

    50 injured in Meerut communal riot
    About 50 people, including a senior police officer and two media persons, were injured in a communal clash in Meerut Saturday, police said. The incident occurred around 2 p.m. in Teer Gehran area when a group of people was installing a water facilitation kiosk near a mosque.

    50 injured in Meerut communal riot

    Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife

    Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife
    An Indian-American Bollywood concert promoter in California has been convicted of aggravated mayhem for paying three men to maim his ex-wife last year, leaving her with permanent facial injuries.

    Bollywood concert promoter convicted in US for brutal attack on ex-wife

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man
    The British teenaged girl who attacked an 80-year-old Sikh pensioner in a city centre in Britain's Coventry last year has been jailed for two years by the Warwick crown court.

    British girl gets jail for attacking elderly Sikh man

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb
    Taking on Congress president Sonia Gandhi for calling him a person of "low thought", BJP prime ministerial candidate Narendra Modi Friday accused her of "stooping low" due to impending defeat in the general elections.

    Modi attacks Sonia Gandhi over 'low thought' barb

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas
    A seven-foot tall bronze statue of India's freedom movement leader will be the centrepiece of the Mahatma Gandhi Memorial of North Texas with walls inscribed with some of his quotes.

    Mahatma Gandhi Memorial Plaza coming up in Texas