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Mumbai’s Hijab-Clad Woman, Shaheen Akhtar, Named ‘Officiating Referee’ For Karate in Asian Games

New Age Islam News Bureau

26 September 2023

·         Mumbai’s Hijab-Clad Woman, Shaheen Akhtar, Named ‘Officiating Referee’ For Karate in Asian Games

·         Legendary Actor Waheeda Rehman to Receive Esteemed Dadasaheb Phalke Award

·         Why Iran Won't Budge on Mandatory Hijab Laws — According to The President's Wife

·         Four Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf Female Workers Rearrested After Release

·         France's Top Court Rejects Appeal Against Ban On Abaya In Schools

Compiled by New Age Islam News Bureau

URL:    https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/hijab-shaheen-akhtar-referee-karate/d/130762

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Mumbai’s Hijab-Clad Woman, Shaheen Akhtar, Named ‘Officiating Referee’ For Karate in Asian Games

 

Photo Siyasat Daily

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September 25, 2023

The hijab-clad Karate maestro Shaheen Akhtar, 52, barely looks what she is — a 4-time National Champion in Karate, chopping her way surgically in all top events worldwide, is now appointed the first and only woman ‘Officiating Referee’ at the ongoing 19th Hangzhou 2022 Asian Games in China.

Packing up her bags to serve as the International Technical Official or Officiating Referee, Shaheen is a smiling but simple granny whose daughter Sana Hava and son Ayaan Ansari are also National Champions in Karate.

She learned her first Karate kicks, stances, punches, blocks and chops aged 13 while a schoolgirl at the Christ Church School, Byculla, excelled while studying for her B.Com degree from H.R. College, Churchgate and loved it enough to make it a full-fledged professional career as a ‘karateka’.

Over four decades since, she has punched her way from Youth League to Premier League to South Asian Championships to Asian Championships to Commonwealth Championships to World Championship events globally, earning medals and honours for her discipline and laurels for the nation, both as a participant and as a referee.

“In Hangzhou, I shall be the Officiating Referee for all events of Karate at the men’s and women’s events scheduled between October 5-7, with top champions participating from 42 Asian countries… It’s a very crucial responsibility,” said Shaheen softly, in a chat with IANS.

Discussing her upcoming challenges as Officiating Referee, Shaheen said that “handling pressure” will be the most critical part of her assignment — when over two billion pairs of eyes from all over Asia will scrutinise her every move and decision.

“All countries are coming there and vying for the medals… Besides the top-class champions from all countries in the ring, there will be top games experts from different countries, sports officials, VIPs, judges and viewers in the stadium and at their homes… Any wrong decision on my part can lead to havoc right inside the stadium,” Shaheen added.

Inside the ring, when the medal-hungry champions from different competing nations would be lunging at each other, the experience will be another trial even for Shaheen, herself an established and acclaimed figure in the sport.

“My job will be to control these rivals in the ring, command them to obey and adhere to the rules of the games, if they falter then there are levels of warnings, penalties, etc. to rein them in… And all under the watchful eyes of many,” Shaheen smiled.

Only on rare occasions, the moderator ‘Kansa’ (Match Supervisor) intervenes and also equally rarely the ‘third umpire’ or the video review supervisor, mainly while appealing for points is resorted to, she explained patiently, without clenching her deadly fists or flailing her arms.

In her new role, the former 4-time National Champion, 6-time Maharashtra Champion, a 8th Degree Black-Belt holder, Shaheen is also the highest and most qualified World Karate Federation and Asian Karate Federation female Referee in the country and in South Asia.

Now, Shaheen is passing on the baton to the gen-next through SAMA (Shaheen’s Academy of Martial Arts) affiliated to Karate India Organisation, and striving to groom future state-national-international champions and referees.

“I hope my long journey inspires the younger generations to take up Karate as a serious and viable career option… India has tremendous untapped potential and there could be many young champs waiting in the wings to grab their moment of glory given the right opportunity…I am always here to help anybody,” Shaheen declared.

Source: muslimmirror.com

https://muslimmirror.com/eng/asian-games-mumbais-hijab-clad-woman-named-officiating-referee-for-karate/

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Legendary Actor Waheeda Rehman to Receive Esteemed Dadasaheb Phalke Award

 

Waheeda Rehman/ file picture

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PTI New Delhi. 26.09.23

Veteran actor Waheeda Rehman will be honoured with this year's Dadasaheb Phalke Award, the highest recognition in the field of Indian cinema, Union Minister for Information and Broadcasting Anurag Thakur said on Tuesday.

Regarded one of India's finest actors, Rehman is best known for films including "Pyaasa", "CID", "Guide", "Kaagaz Ke Phool", "Khamoshi" and "Trishul".

Thakur took to his official X account to make the announcement.

"I feel an immense sense of happiness and honour in announcing that Waheeda Rehman ji is being bestowed with the prestigious Dadasaheb Phalke Lifetime Achievement Award this year for her stellar contribution to Indian Cinema," the minister wrote.

Rehman, 85, made her acting debut with the 1955 Telugu films "RojuluMaraayi" and "Jayasimha". She made her Hindi cinema debut with "CID", the 1956 film headlined by Dev Anand.

In a career spanning over five decades, the legendary actor has worked in more than 90 films across languages. She received a National Film Award for her role as a clanswoman in "Reshma and Shera" (1971). She is already the recipient of Padma Shri and Padma Bhushan.

"At a time when the historic Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam has been passed by Parliament, her being awarded with this lifetime achievement award is a fitting tribute to one of the leading ladies of Indian Cinema and one who has dedicated her life after films to philanthropy and the greater good of society. I congratulate her and humbly pay my regards to her rich body of work that is an intrinsic part of our film history," Thakur further said in his post on the microblogging site.

Rehman was last seen in "Skater Girl", a 2021 coming-of-age sports drama.

Source: telegraphindia.com

https://www.telegraphindia.com/entertainment/legendary-actor-waheeda-rehman-to-receive-esteemed-dadasaheb-phalke-award/cid/1969080

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Why Iran won't budge on mandatory hijab laws — according to the president's wife

September 25, 2023

Iran's government has put forth a new spokesperson to defend its policies toward women: the president's wife.

Jamileh Alamolhoda accompanied her husband to the annual meeting of the United Nations in New York. She took questions from NPR as her country marked the one-year anniversary of nationwide uprisings that were triggered by the death of Mahsa Amini, a woman who died in police custody for allegedly not wearing the compulsory headscarf correctly.

Alamolhoda's husband came to New York last year as those protests swept across the country and famously canceled an interview with CNN anchor Christiane Amanpour after she declined to cover her hair. Now, a year later, his wife strove to make a different impression, though she defended her government's policy.

"I am mostly representing women and ladies whose voices have not been heard by Americans," she said. She asserted that many Iranian women support the head coverings, and she defended a crackdown on protests in which thousands of people were detained, hundreds killed, and several executed for participating in the uprising, according to human rights groups.

Alamolhoda—whose aides say is not called the First Lady but simply the president's wife—spoke while wearing a chador, a kind of black head-to-toe cape that she clutched so that it covered her hair. She spoke softly at first, but became more animated as the conversation progressed.

She is from Mashad, a conservative city most noted for a vast Shia Muslim shrine. She has said that her husband permitted her education. She holds advanced degrees and a professorship of a university. And in arguing in favor of restrictions on women, she maintains she is advocating for women—those who primarily support their husbands and families.

"Traditional feminist movements do not tend to be very helpful to them because their road map is quite different. The traditional feminist movements are, in fact, based on a competition between men and women," she said.

The president's wife represents both Iran's education and its forms of conservatism. She insisted that Iranian women who rebelled were following Western culture as expressed in Hollywood films or social media, and were choosing "Americanization," which she defined as the pursuit of financial independence "at the cost of everything else." She advocated "Iranianization," which she described as a more traditional focus on family.

Robin Wright, a specialist on Iran, says many women in Iran do embrace conservative views. But over the past 40 years — with the support of the government itself — Iranian women have grown almost universally literate and far better educated than in the past. More educated women have made more connections with the wider world, and some have demanded the choice to dress and act differently.

They include 19-year-old Baran, an Iranian who told NPR last month that she will never go back to wearing the mandatory headscarf. "No. No way. I prefer to die," she said from Tehran, adding that she would continue fighting for Mahsa Amini and "everyone killed by Islamic Republic of Iran."

The dress code remains vital to the government where clerics have held ultimate authority since a revolution in 1979. "If the majority of women took off their headscarves or rebelled against the Islamic dress code, that would amount to the unraveling of the revolution," Wright said.

Iran's government has tamped down most protests. But anger and desperation persist

ON THE GROUND IN IRAN

Iran's government has tamped down most protests. But anger and desperation persist

On the day we met Alamolhoda, Iran's parliament voted for legislation increasing fines and prison terms for violating the dress code.

Asked why the government felt threatened by women who made a choice to see the world differently, she replied that it would "negatively affect" the "health of the family unit," asserting that something like this had happened in the United States.

"Lack of humility in covering leads to increased nakedness. And this causes family issues. It ends up in the destruction of the family unit, it ends in divorces and such social anomalies," Alamolhoda said.

Before the interview, NPR asked a number of women in Iran what questions they would pose to the president's wife. One, named Sara, asked what message Alamolhoda had for the mothers whose daughters were killed in the protests of the past year.

"I feel their loss," Alamolhoda said, adding that men had also lost their lives "in defense of public order" during the past year.

Some security were killed during the protests.

The president's wife said they were supporting "the dignity of women."

Source: npr.org

https://www.npr.org/2023/09/25/1201128942/jamileh-alamolhoda-interview-hijab-laws-mahsa-amini

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Four Pakistan Tehreek-e-InsafFemale Workers Rearrested After Release

September 26, 2023

LAHORE:Shortly after their release from Kot Lakhpat Jail, four PTI female activists, who were allegedly involved in creating a law-and-order disturbance and attacking Jinnah House following the arrest of party Chairman Imran Khan on May 9, were rearrested outside the prison. They were apprehended in connection with an FIR registered at Sarwar Road Police Station.

The individuals taken into custody were identified as Sanam Javed, Afshan Tariq, AshmiaShujah, and Shah Bano Gorchani. They were transported in a prison van and subsequently transferred to a women's police station. While en route, Sanam Javed exclaimed, "again arrest," confirming her detention.

Earlier in the day, an anti-terrorism court (ATC) in Lahore had issued their release orders after the accused had provided their surety bonds. There was a significant police presence outside Kot Lakhpat Jail during their release.

However, following their release, sources suggested that the four female activists could face further arrests.

Meanwhile, the prosecution decided to challenge in the high court bails granted to those allegedly involved in attacking the Jinnah House. Consultation for the preparation of an application in this regard was under way.

On Saturday, of the 63 accused persons, an ATC granted post-arrest bail to nine and dismissed pleas of 39 allegedly involved in creating a law and order situation on May 9.

Judge Arshad Javed granted bails to Sanam Javed, Shah Bano Gorchani, AshmiaShujah, Rubina Jameel, Mubeen Qadri, Syed Faisal Akhtar, Ali Hassan, Afshan Tariq, and Muhammad Qasim.

However, the ATC judge fixed next date in pre-arrest bails of the 13 accused for further proceedings.

The prosecution had placed its arguments that the accused were involved in creating law and order situation and that there was substantial evidence of their involvement in the attack on Jinnah House.

It requested the court to dismiss their bail pleas.

However, the counsels for the accused contended that the accused had been implicated in a forged case merely to humiliate them despite the fact that they had nothing to do with this case. They requested the court to grant them bail.

The ATC judge after hearing detailed arguments, granted bails to nine and dismissed the post-arrest pleas of 39 accused, including Khadija Shah.

The Sarwar Road police had registered an FIR against the accused over allegedly creating chaos and attacking Jinnah House following the arrest of PTI chief.

Last week, a provision of sedition was added to the challans of all the suspects, including the PTI chairman for his alleged involvement in the May 9 mayhem.

SSP Investigation Lahore Dr Anoosh Masood Chaudhry said Section 120-B (punishment for criminal conspiracy) of the Pakistan Penal Code (PPC) had been imposed in all the cases including the primary one of the May 9 violence.

She added that the addition of the sedition provision was a substantial move in the ongoing legal proceedings.

Police said that despite the absence of the PTI chairman at the scene of the May 9 violent events, there was evidence of Imran inciting his activists and planning a rebellion against the state.

According to the police, the provision of sedition had been added after the prosecution objected to the challans.

Therefore, they added that all the objections of the prosecution had been removed before submitting the challans.

The party finds itself in hot water following the events of May 9, when in an unprecedented show of vandalism, protesters allegedly belonging to the PTI, vandalised public and state properties and even attacked the General Headquarters in Rawalpindi and Lahore’s Jinnah House, where the city’s corps commander was residing.

The attacks occurred hours after the paramilitary Rangers arrested the PTI chief in the Al-Qadir Trust corruption case – later retitled as National Crime Agency £190 million scandal – on the orders of the National Accountability Bureau (NAB), from the Islamabad High Court premises.

The rioting was followed by a harsh crackdown against the former ruling party leaders and activists.

The army termed the events of May 9 a “dark chapter” and announced its intent to try the protesters under relevant laws, including two military laws — the Pakistan Army Act and Official Secrets Act.

The decision was backed by the National Security Committee – the country’s top security panel.

It was approved by the federal cabinet wherein it was decided that the protesters who ransacked and vandalised military installations on May 9 would be tried under the Army Act and Official Secrets Act.

Source: tribune.com.pk

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2437715/four-pti-female-workers-rearrested-after-release

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France's top court rejects appeal against ban on abaya in schools

Anadolu Agency

September 25, 2023

LONDON:France’s highest court on Monday ruled that the government ban on Muslim dress abaya is legal.

The Council of State said it had rejected an appeal by three organizations against the government ban announced last month on abaya – a loose-fitting and full-length robe – worn by some Muslim students in schools.

Last week, the Sud Education Paris, La Voix Lyceenne and Le Poing Leve Lycee unions in France filed an appeal against the ban.

On Aug. 31, Vincent Brengarth, a lawyer for the Muslim Rights Action (ADM), filed an appeal with the Council of State to seek the suspension of the ban on the abaya which he said violates "several fundamental freedoms."

On Sept. 7, the Council of State rejected the ADM's appeal, saying: "This ban does not seriously violate and is not manifestly illegal to the right to respect for private life, the freedom of religion, the right to education."

The controversial move sparked a backlash against the government, which has been criticized in recent years for targeting Muslims with statements and policies, including raids on mosques and charitable foundations, and an "anti-separatism" law that imposes broad restrictions on the community.

Source: tribune.com.pk

https://tribune.com.pk/story/2437691/frances-top-court-rejects-appeal-against-ban-on-abaya-in-schools

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 URL:    https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/hijab-shaheen-akhtar-referee-karate/d/130762

 

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