Sports

Afghan refugee athlete disqualified from Olympic breakdancing event


Talash during the B-Girls Pre-Qualifier battle between India vs Talash on Day 14 of the Olympic Games (Picture Getty Images)

Manizha Talash, a member of the refugee Olympic team at the Paris Games, was controversially disqualified from the breakdancing event.

Talash displayed the words ‘Free Afghan Women’ on her cape during her routine in the competition’s pre-qualifiers on Friday.

The dancer, who lives in Spain, wore a light blue cape that had the phrase written on it with large white letters during her pre-qualifier loss to India Sardjoe of Netherlands.

Political slogans and statements are banned on the field of play and on podiums at the Olympics and breaking’s governing body later said the 21-year-old had been disqualified.

Talash was ‘disqualified for displaying a political slogan on her attire,’ World DanceSport Federation said in a statement.

Talash during the B-Girls Pre-Qualifier battle between India vs Talash on Day 14 of the Olympic Games(Photo by Harry Langer/DeFodi Images via Getty Images)
Talash of Team of Refugee Olympic Team competes while wearing a outfit which reads ‘Free Afghan women’ during the B-girls Pre-Qualifier (Photo by Ezra Shaw/Getty Images)

The Paris Games are the third Olympics where a team of refugees is taking part, with 37 athletes competing in 12 different sports including athletics, badminton and boxing.

Afghanistan is represented by a contingent of three women and three men, in a largely symbolic move by the International Olympic Committee as a message to the country, which under Taliban rule has restricted women’s and girls’ access to sports and gyms.

Both the head of Afghanistan’s national Olympic committee (NOC) recognised by the IOC and its secretary general are currently in exile.

The Taliban – who say they respect women’s rights in line with their interpretation of Islamic law and local customs – have closed girls’ high schools, placed travel restrictions on women without a male guardian and restricted access to parks and gyms since seizing power in August 2021.

The IOC has said no Taliban official has been accredited for the Games.


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