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Moroccan athlete Nawal El Moutawakel celebrates her historic victory as the first Arab Muslim woman gold medalist at the Los Angeles Olympic Games in August 1984, in the US. Getty Images
Moroccan athlete Nawal El Moutawakel celebrates her historic victory as the first Arab Muslim woman gold medalist at the Los Angeles Olympic Games in August 1984, in the US. Getty Images

1984 - Nawal El-Moutawakel’s historic Olympic victory

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Updated 19 April 2025

1984 - Nawal El-Moutawakel’s historic Olympic victory

1984 - Nawal El-Moutawakel’s historic Olympic victory
  • In 1984, the athlete became the first Arab Muslim woman, and Moroccan, to win a gold medal 

JEDDAH: On March 1, 2020, I was touring the Olympic Museum in Lausanne with the Riyadh United women’s basketball team, at the invitation of the former Swiss president, Ueli Maurer. 

The museum’s interactive exhibits take you on a historical tour, from the first Ancient Games in 776 B.C. to the father of the modern Olympics, Baron Pierre de Coubertin, who helped establish the International Olympic Committee in Paris on June 23, 1894. 

The first modern Olympics took place in Athens in 1896, with 14 countries taking part but no female competitors. At the next Olympics, in Paris in 1900, women were allowed to participate for the first time, wearing ankle-length skirts, but were limited to a few sports: sailing, golf, tennis and croquet. 

It was not until 1928, at the Games in Amsterdam, that women were allowed to compete in track and field. Fast-forward 56 years to the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles, where Nawal El-Moutawakel won the 400-meter hurdles to become the first Arab Muslim woman, and Moroccan, to win a gold medal. Newspapers around the world marked this milestone, with Arab News publishing her winning picture on its front page. 

Even though I was at a very young age to remember that event, her legendary achievement stands as a landmark in the accomplishments of Arab and Muslim female athletes. After she won, King Hassan II of Morocco called her to congratulate her, and declared that all girls born that day were to be named in her honor.  

How we wrote it




Arab News’ front-page headline “Arab girl makes history” featured emotional El-Moutawakel raising her country’s flag in triumph.

As I reflect on my own experiences as a nonprofessional athlete growing up in ֱ, I will say that I come from a family who integrated sports into our lives from a young age. My siblings and I played tennis, football and even cricket with my father. I also attended private Saudi schools, which meant I had opportunities to practice sports. 

I found my passion in basketball. My uncle Tariq was my first basketball coach and he bought several rims and placed them on all family garages. 

In 2003, I formed a local basketball team with classmates from high school. This led me to establish Jeddah United Sports Co., which eventually became the first accredited sports academy in ֱ. The Jeddah United and Riyadh United women’s teams have participated in sports exchanges around the globe. 

As this was happening, other Saudi women began accomplishing their own milestones in sport. In 2008, Arwa Mutabagani was appointed the first female board member of the Saudi Equestrian Federation. Her daughter, Dalma Malhas, won a historic bronze medal at the Summer Youth Olympics in Singapore in 2010.  

In May 2012, I reached the base camp of Mount Everest with 10 Saudi women, headed by Princess Reema bint Bandar, the Saudi ambassador to the US, in an effort to raise awareness of breast cancer and the importance of physical activity in prevention and treatment. 

And in June 2012, ֱ joined the rest of the world in sending female athletes to the Summer Olympics. Wojdan Shaherkani competed in judo, and Sarah Attar ran the 800-meter sprint at the London Games. Attar might have finished last in her race but she received a standing ovation from 80,000 spectators, who cheered her across the finish line. 

Key Dates

  • 1

    Women allowed to participate in Olympics for the first time, at the Paris Games; Switzerland’s Helene de Pourtales is the first female gold medalist (her team won for sailing); Britain’s Charlotte Cooper is the first individual champion, in singles tennis.

    Timeline Image 1900

  • 2

    Nawal El-Moutawakel of Morocco wins the 400m hurdles at the Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, the first Arab Muslim woman to claim a gold medal.

    Timeline Image Aug. 8, 1984

  • 3

    ֱ sends female athletes to the Olympics for the first time. Wojdan Shaherkani competes in judo at the London Games and Sarah Attar on the track; the latter receives a standing ovation as she crosses the finish line in the 800m heats.

    Timeline Image June 2012

  • 4

    Sara Ahmed wins bronze in weightlifting at the Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro to become Egypt’s first female Olympic medalist.

  • 5

    Fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad, the first US athlete to compete at the Olympics wearing a hijab, wins bronze in the team saber event at the Rio Olympics.

    Timeline Image Aug. 13, 2016

  • 6

    Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman launches Saudi Vision 2030, which includes plans to promote widespread participation in sports.

  • 7

    International Basketball Federation lifts ban on players wearing the hijab.

  • 8

    Rower Hussein Alireza and sprinter Yasmine Al-Dabbagh jointly carry ֱ’s flag at the opening ceremony of the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo, delayed for a year because of the COVID 19 pandemic.

    Timeline Image July 23, 2021

  • 9

    First Saudi female Olympic swimmer, Mashael Al-Ayed, secures a commendable sixth place in the women’s 200m freestyle heats at the Paris Games.

ֱ’s ambitious Vision 2030 plan for national reform and diversification was announced on April 25, 2016. Its strategic objectives for social and economic empowerment include the promotion of sports and physical activities. Specific aims include increasing the proportion of individuals who exercise regularly from 13 percent to 40 percent; enabling Saudi athletes to perform at higher levels in a wide range of sports; and expanding Saudi participation at international sporting events. 

In 2017, the Ministry of Education approved a physical education program for girls in public schools, and in 2018 women in the Kingdom were allowed to attend sports events in stadiums, something previously strictly limited to men. 

At the Rio de Janeiro Olympics in 2016, ֱ sent twice as many female athletes, four, compared with the London Games, and they once again included Attar. Arab and Muslim women achieved several milestones during those Games: Sara Ahmed of Egypt became the first Arab female medalist in weightlifting when she won bronze; and fencer Ibtihaj Muhammad, who won bronze in the team saber event, was the first US athlete to compete at the Olympics wearing a hijab. 

On May 3, 2017, the International Basketball Federation announced it was lifting its ban on players wearing the hijab. This was a significant move because it is through the federation’s basketball World Cup that nations can qualify for the Olympic Games. 

In March 2019, another milestone of inclusion took place, at the Special Olympics in Abu Dhabi, when members of the Saudi team won 18 gold medals in various sports. 




El-Moutawakel on the podium after winning the women’s 400 Metres Hurdles at the Los Angeles Olympics. Getty Images

To help support the girls’ basketball team, the Saudi Olympic and Paralympic Committee collaborated with the renowned Help Center, a non-profit organization that empowers, supports and trains girls and boys with intellectual disabilities. Jeddah United were asked to recommend players who could play alongside athletes with intellectual disabilities to form the Saudi women’s unified basketball team. It was implemented according to the “4P” concept: Public-Private-People-Partnership. 

The Saudi women’s unified basketball team made history at the 2019 Special Olympics in Abu Dhabi, as the only team that was undefeated on their path to the gold medal. 

Later that year, Saudi women made a historic appearance at the sixth Gulf Cooperation Council Games in Kuwait, participating in eight events and winning two gold medals, in fencing. 

Since then things have only gotten better for Saudi female athletes. At the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo, Saudi sprinter Yasmeen Al-Dabbagh competed in the women’s 100m in the track and field events, while Tahani Al-Qahtani represented the Kingdom in the +78kg category of the Judo competition. 




ֱ’s Dunya Ali M Abutaleb celebrates advancing to the next round of her taekwondo women’s -49kg at the Paris 2024 Olympics. AFP

In a historic moment, Al-Dabbagh joined Saudi rower Husein Alireza in carrying the Kingdom’s flag at the opening ceremony. The 2020 Games were the first at which a male and female athlete could jointly have the honor of carrying their nation’s flag, as a result of a rule change to promote gender equality. 

At the Paris Olympics last year, 17-year-old Mashael Alayed became the first Saudi woman to compete in the swimming at the Games. She was one of three female Saudi participants, alongside Dunya Abutaleb, a bronze medalist at the World Taekwondo Championships in 2022, and Hibah Mohammed, the Kingdom’s sole female representative in the athletics competitions, who was granted a wildcard entry to the 100m sprint but was unable to compete after picking up an injury during training. 

The 2024 Olympics were also the first at which there was full gender parity, with equal numbers of men and women competing. 

And let us not forget the achievements of Reema Juffali, ֱ’s first female racing driver, who received a wild card entry at the F1 Academy season opener in Jeddah last year. 

As Saudi women continue to make tremendous progress in the sports arena, we can expect to see them excel in all fields, in the process inspiring future generations of female athletes to build on such milestones. 

In the Ancient Olympics in Greece, athletes competed in just one event: a foot race for men. Who could have imagined the course of development that would lead to an Arab Muslim female runner winning gold at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics? 

  • Lina K. Almaeena is co-founder and chairperson of Jeddah United Sports Co. She is a former member of the Shoura Council and was ranked on media company Forbes’ list of the 200 Most Powerful Arab Women. 


Real Madrid sign Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool

Updated 25 sec ago

Real Madrid sign Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool

Real Madrid sign Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool
  • Real Madrid have signed defender Trent Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool on a deal until 2031, the Spanish giants said on Friday
MADRID: Real Madrid have signed defender Trent Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool on a deal until 2031, the Spanish giants said on Friday.
The 26-year-old England international’s contract at Anfield was drawing to an end but Madrid paid a fee to bring him in earlier so he can play in the Club World Cup.
Right-back Alexander-Arnold, who has just won the Premier League title with Liverpool, came through the academy of his boyhood club and won the Champions League in 2019.
He also won the Premier League in 2020 and 352 appearances for the club.
The defender joins former Liverpool midfielder Xabi Alonso at Real Madrid, with the Spaniard appointed as their new coach to replace Carlo Ancelotti.
Alexander-Arnold’s close connections to Liverpool meant that his announcement that he was leaving the club was viewed with disgust by some supporters and he was booed in the penultimate match of the season.
But after club figures including former manager Jurgen Klopp and Mohamed Salah urged fans to remember the contribution he has made to Liverpool’s success over the last six years, he was roundly cheered when he lifted the Premier League trophy at Anfield last Sunday.
The defender joins a Real Madrid side which failed to win a major trophy this season.
Alexander-Arnold has been criticized for his defensive concentration at times but brings supreme passing vision and attacking edge down the right flank.
Real Madrid have struggled at right-back this season with Dani Carvajal recovering from a long-term knee injury and winger Lucas Vazquez enduring a torrid time there out of position.
Alexander-Arnold could make his Real Madrid debut when they face ֱn side Al-Hilal in their opening Club World Cup match on June 18 in Miami.
Real Madrid have also signed Spanish center-back Dean Huijsen from Bournemouth as they look to bolster a back-line which was ravaged by injury this season.

Pakistan criminalizes child marriages in Islamabad despite opposition from Council of Islamic Ideology

Pakistan criminalizes child marriages in Islamabad despite opposition from Council of Islamic Ideology
Updated 19 min 35 sec ago

Pakistan criminalizes child marriages in Islamabad despite opposition from Council of Islamic Ideology

Pakistan criminalizes child marriages in Islamabad despite opposition from Council of Islamic Ideology
  • Under the new law, the minimum age for marriage is set at 18 for both men and women in the federal capital
  • Prison terms of up to seven years have been introduced for those who facilitate or coerce children into early marriages

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on Friday signed into law a bill criminalizing child marriages in the federal capital of Islamabad, despite opposition from a constitutional body that advises the Pakistani government on the compatibility of laws with Islam.

The law criminalizes underage marriages and introduces strict penalties of up to seven years in prison for family members, clerics and marriage registrars who facilitate or coerce children into early marriages. Any sexual relations within a marriage involving a minor, regardless of consent, will be considered statutory rape, according to the law. An adult man who marries a girl under the legal age could face up to three years in prison.

Pakistan’s National Assembly had unanimously passed the Islamabad Capital Territory Child Marriage Restraint Bill tabled by Pakistan Peoples Party’s (PPP) Sharmila Faruqui on May 16. Under the new law, the minimum legal age for marriage for both men and women in Islamabad is 18. Previously, it was 16 for girls and 18 for boys.

However, the Council of Islamic Ideology this week declared the said bill “un-Islamic,” saying that clauses of the bill, such as fixing the age limit for marriage and declaring marriage below the age of 18 as child abuse and punishable, did not conform with Islamic injunctions.

“The Islamabad Capital Territory Child Marriage Restraint Bill, 2025 is assented to, as passed by the Parliament,” President Zardari was quoted as saying in a notification issued from his office.

In Pakistan, 29 percent of girls are married by the age of 18 and 4 percent marry before the age of 15, according to Girls Not Brides, a global coalition working to end child marriage. In comparison, five percent of boys marry before 18.

PPP Senator Sherry Rehman thanked the president for signing the bill into law “despite all pressure.”

“Proud moment for Pakistan,” she said on X. “Thank you to all the women and men who made this possible after a long journey of twists and turns.”

Pakistan ranks among the top 10 countries globally with the highest absolute number of women who were married or in a union before turning 18.

Girls who marry young are less likely to complete their education and are more vulnerable to domestic violence, abuse and serious health complications.

Pregnancy poses significantly higher risks for child brides, increasing the chances of obstetric fistulas, sexually transmitted infections and even maternal death. Teenagers are far more likely to die from childbirth-related complications than women in their twenties.


Egypt denies court ruling threatens historic monastery

Egypt denies court ruling threatens historic monastery
Updated 30 min 50 sec ago

Egypt denies court ruling threatens historic monastery

Egypt denies court ruling threatens historic monastery
  • A court in Sinai ruled on that the monastery ‘is entitled to use’ the land, which ‘the state owns as public property’
  • Archbishop Ieronymos of Athens called the court ruling ‘scandalous’

CAIRO: Egypt has denied that a controversial court ruling over Sinai’s Saint Catherine monastery threatens the UNESCO world heritage landmark, after Greek and church authorities warned of the sacred site’s status.

A court in Sinai ruled on Wednesday in a land dispute between the monastery and the South Sinai governorate that the monastery “is entitled to use” the land, which “the state owns as public property.”

President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi’s office defended the ruling Thursday, saying it “consolidates” the site’s “unique and sacred religious status,” after the head of the Greek Orthodox church in Greece denounced it.

Archbishop Ieronymos of Athens called the court ruling “scandalous” and an infringement by Egyptian judicial authorities of religious freedoms.

He said the decision means “the oldest Orthodox Christian monument in the world, the Holy Monastery of Saint Catherine in Mount Sinai, now enters a period of severe trial — one that evokes much darker times in history.”

El-Sisi’s office in a statement said it “reiterates its full commitment to preserving the unique and sacred religious status of Saint Catherine’s monastery and preventing its violation.”

The monastery was established in the sixth century at the biblical site of the burning bush in the southern mountains of the Sinai peninsula, and is the world’s oldest continually inhabited Christian monastery.

The Saint Catherine area, which includes the eponymous town and a nature reserve, is undergoing mass development under a controversial government megaproject aimed at bringing in mass tourism.

Observers say the project has harmed the reserve’s ecosystem and threatened both the monastery and the local community.

Archbishop Ieronymos warned that the monastery’s property would now be “seized and confiscated,” despite “recent pledges to the contrary by the Egyptian President to the Greek Prime Minister.”

Greek Foreign Minister Giorgos Gerapetritis contacted his Egyptian counterpart Badr Abdelatty on Thursday, saying “there was no room for deviation from the agreements between the two parties,” the ministry’s spokesperson said.

In a statement to Egypt’s state news agency, the foreign ministry in Cairo later said rumors of confiscation were “unfounded,” and that the ruling “does not infringe at all” on the monastery’s sites or its religious and spiritual significance.

Greek government spokesman Pavlos Marinakis said “Greece will express its official position ... when the official and complete content of the court decision is known and evaluated.”

He confirmed both countries’ commitment to “maintaining the Greek Orthodox religious character of the monastery.”


De Bruyne is Manchester City’s ‘greatest player’ says club chairman as Guardiola prepares team for Club World Cup

De Bruyne is Manchester City’s ‘greatest player’ says club chairman as Guardiola prepares team for Club World Cup
Updated 33 min 40 sec ago

De Bruyne is Manchester City’s ‘greatest player’ says club chairman as Guardiola prepares team for Club World Cup

De Bruyne is Manchester City’s ‘greatest player’ says club chairman as Guardiola prepares team for Club World Cup
  • In Part 1 of his review of the 2024-2025 season, Khaldoon Al-Mubarak looks back on the challenges faced by the team and confirms his confidence that they will be back to winning ways

ABU DHABI: Manchester City chairman Khaldoon Al-Mubarak has provided his annual review of the season to the club’s official online channel. In Part 1 of the interview he discussed the challenges of the 2024-2025 campaign, the departure of a club legend and his trust in manager Pep Guardiola. Here are some of the highlights.

On City improving next season …

We will be back. This season is a season that’s now behind us. And we will take all the good things and the not-so-good things from this season and learn from it and improve from it and get better.

I can assure you, this club will do everything possible to come back to the standards that we know we all can achieve and that we know, we will achieve. If there’s one thing I’d like right now, it’s to turn that page from last season and just immediately start focusing on next season.

All the players, everyone I saw yesterday after the Fulham game, all the players, they’re excited, they’re excited about coming back. Nobody feels good about how we finished the season. They want to come back and they want to come back hungry. And I can see the hunger.

And that’s exactly why you see me so positive. We’re going to come back strong, with a lot of positivity.

On City’s summer transfer strategy …

We have clearly identified who exactly are the targets, in what positions, and we have our clear No.1 option, our clear No.2 option. And we’ll go about our business, and it will be very clear, very swift.

Our objective is to try to be ready with the new squad for the Club World Cup.

 

 

On Kevin De Bruyne …

In my view, he is the greatest player to play for this club. His accomplishments speak for themselves. His accomplishments for the club in terms of trophies — that tally, number of Premier Leagues, the Champions League, FA Cups, Community Shields, Carabao Cups. It’s an unbelievable tally, the highest of any player who has ever played for this club.

He's been a captain. He’s been a leader. He’s been a teammate. He’s been everything you would hope from your most important player.

Kevin really transcends this team and I’m so proud of what he has accomplished. It’s one of the best decisions we ever took – the day we took the decision to invest in Kevin and bring him from Wolfsburg. I remember some people thought we overpaid.

On Pep Guardiola …

One thing we have with Pep, which is so fundamental, is one word: trust.

We have trust, and it goes both ways. I think he trusts us. He trusts me. He trusts the organisation. He trusts the club, and we trust him.

And that trust is what, in the good times, allows you to keep winning. And in the tough times, that’s where that trust really shows up.

And we’ve gone through all these ups and downs, and we’ve always stood together as a team. And inevitably it’s always shown to be the foundation of our success.

 


Israel aid blockage making Gaza ‘hungriest region on earth’, UN office says

Israel aid blockage making Gaza ‘hungriest region on earth’, UN office says
Updated 32 min 11 sec ago

Israel aid blockage making Gaza ‘hungriest region on earth’, UN office says

Israel aid blockage making Gaza ‘hungriest region on earth’, UN office says

BERLIN: Israel is blocking all but a trickle of humanitarian aid from entering Gaza, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said, with almost no ready-to-eat food entering what its spokesperson described as “the hungriest place on earth.”
Spokesperson Jens Laerke said only 600 of 900 aid trucks had been authorized to get to Israel’s border with Gaza, and from there a mixture of bureaucratic and security obstacles made it all but impossible to safely carry aid into the region.
“What we have been able to bring in is flour,” he told a regular news conference on Friday. “That’s not ready to eat, right? It needs to be cooked... 100 percent of the population of Gaza is at risk of famine.”
Tommaso della Longa, a spokesperson for the International Committee of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, added that half of its medical facilities in the region were out of action for lack of fuel or medical equipment.