Current:Home > NewsAmbassador responds to call by Evert and Navratilova to keep women’s tennis out of Saudi Arabia -GrowthInsight
Ambassador responds to call by Evert and Navratilova to keep women’s tennis out of Saudi Arabia
View
Date:2025-04-13 08:58:59
WASHINGTON (AP) — Saudi Arabia’s ambassador to the United States said Hall of Famers Chris Evert and Martina Navratilova relied on “outdated stereotypes and western-centric views of our culture” in urging the women’s tennis tour to avoid holding its season-ending tournament in the kingdom.
“These champions have turned their back on the very same women they have inspired and it is beyond disappointing,” Princess Reema bint Bandar Al Saud wrote Tuesday in response to an op-ed piece by Evert and Navratilova printed in The Washington Post last week.
“Sports are meant to be a great equalizer that offers opportunity to everyone based on ability, dedication and hard work,” the Saudi diplomat said. “Sports should not be used as a weapon to advance personal bias or agendas ... or punish a society that is eager to embrace tennis and help celebrate and grow the sport.”
Tennis has been consumed lately by the debate over whether the sport should follow golf and others in making deals with Saudi Arabia, where rights groups say women continue to face discrimination in most aspects of family life and homosexuality is a major taboo, as it is in much of the rest of the Middle East.
In their opinion piece, Evert and Navratilova asked the WTA Tour whether “staging a Saudi crown-jewel tournament would involve players in an act of sportswashing merely for the sake of a cash influx.”
In recent years, Saudi Arabia has enacted wide-ranging social reforms, including granting women the right to drive and largely dismantling male guardianship laws that had allowed husbands and male relatives to control many aspects of women’s lives. Men and women are still required to dress modestly, but the rules have been loosened and the once-feared religious police have been sidelined.
Still, same-sex relations are punishable by death or flogging, though prosecutions are rare.
“While there’s still work to be done, the recent progress for women, the engagement of women in the workforce, and the social and cultural opportunities being created for women are truly profound, and should not be overlooked,” said Princess Reema, who has been the ambassador to the U.S. since 2019 and is a member of the International Olympic Committee’s Gender, Equality and Inclusion Commission.
“We recognize and welcome that there should be a healthy debate about progress for women,” the diplomat said. “My country is not yet a perfect place for women. No place is.”
___
AP tennis: https://apnews.com/hub/tennis
veryGood! (731)
Related
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Police arrest, charge suspect for allegedly hitting 6 migrants with SUV
- Michigan prosecutors charge Trump allies in felonies involving voting machines, illegal ‘testing’
- What Euphoria—And Hollywood—Lost With Angus Cloud's Death
- Person accused of accosting Rep. Nancy Mace at Capitol pleads not guilty to assault charge
- First long COVID treatment clinical trials from NIH getting underway
- Ukraine moves its Christmas Day holiday in effort to abandon the Russian heritage
- Accessorize in Style With These $8 Jewelry Deals From Baublebar
- Finally, good retirement news! Southwest pilots' plan is a bright spot, experts say
- Judi Dench says she can no longer see on film sets due to macular degeneration eye condition
Ranking
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- Deadly stabbing of gay man at NYC gas station investigated as potential hate crime
- Euphoria Actor Angus Cloud Dead at 25
- Analysis: Buildup of American forces in Persian Gulf a new signal of worsening US-Iran conflict
- NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
- Suzanne Somers reveals she recently battled breast cancer again
- Arrow's Stephen Amell Raises Eyebrows With Controversial Comments About Myopic Actors Strike
- Inside Margot Robbie and Tom Ackerley's Dreamy Love Story
Recommendation
'Vanderpump Rules' star DJ James Kennedy arrested on domestic violence charges
Thermo Fisher Scientific settles with family of Henrietta Lacks, whose HeLa cells uphold medicine
Summer of Smoke: Inside Canada's hub of operations as nation battles 5,000 wildfires
Accessorize in Style With These $8 Jewelry Deals From Baublebar
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
Middlebury College offers $10K pay-to-delay proposal as enrollment surges
Environmental groups say they’ll sue to block Virginia from leaving greenhouse gas compact
Angus Cloud, of Euphoria fame, dead at 25