PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian men’s team will face Azerbaijan in the 7th round of the World Chess Olympiad in Istanbul, Turkey.
In round 6, Armenia played in a 2-2 draw with Russia while Azerbaijan defeated Croatia 3-1. Currently, Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan have 11 points each.
Armenian men’s team scored victories over Bolivia, Bangladesh, Spain, Philippines and Ukraine in previous rounds.
via Armenia to face Azerbaijan in World Chess Olympiad round 7 – PanARMENIAN.Net.
Turkish EU Minister Egemen Bağış has invited Greek Cypriot President Demetris Christofias to a football game in Istanbul with a message he posted on his personal Twitter account today.
“[President Christofias] was looking for a reason to come to Istanbul. He should come with [Turkish Cypriot President Derviş] Eroğlu for Fenerbahçe’s match with Limassol,” Bağış tweeted today, inviting Christofias to the Europa League encounter between Fenerbahçe and Greek Cypriot AEL Limassol in Istanbul on Nov. 8. Bağış added that he would buy a round of coffee for the two leaders after the game ends.
Bağış also said Greek Cypriots should seek help from Turkish Cyprus if they were not sure whether they could ensure the safety of the players of Fenerbahçe for the two teams’ other Europa League clash, an Oct. 25 tilt that will be played in Greek Cyprus.
“Greek Cypriots have a poor record in protecting Turkish teams. They should seek help from Turkish Rep. of Northern Cyprus 4 Fenerbahce game,” Bağış tweeted.
September/02/2012
via TURKEY – Turkey’s EU minister invites Christofias to football game.
Wembley in pole position to host Euro 2020 final as part of continent-wide tournament
By Sportsmail Reporter
Wembley could host the Euro 2020 final as part of a radical plan to host the tournament across 12 different countries.
The ambitious blueprint is the idea of UEFA president Michel Platini and will be put to delegates in December ahead of a vote in January or February.
UEFA hope to create a ‘Finals Week’ with the semis and final played in one city.
In the running: Wembley could host the Euro 2020 final
And according to the Sunday Mirror, London is among the major contenders to land the honour.
Turkey had been favourite to host the event in 2020, but their bid has hit difficulties due to a desire to host the Olympic Games in Istanbul in the same year.
Scotland, Wales and the Republic of Ireland have also formally declared an interest in hosting Euro 2020.
Earlier this summer, Platini said: ‘This matter will be discussed very seriously. We will have a great debate about 2020 and discuss the pros and cons.
Man with the plan: Michel Platini wants to host Euro 2020 across the continent
Man with the plan: Michel Platini wants to host Euro 2020 across the continent
‘It’s an idea I feel really passionate about, it will be a lot easier from a financial perspective.
‘We are not going to wait until we know whether Turkey are going to get the Olympics.
‘It creates a problem for us. We do have other candidates. Everyone has the possibility to host it.
‘It is easier to go from London to Paris or Berlin than Cardiff to Gdansk. It would be four games per venue. It is a great debate.’
via Wembley could host Euro 2020 final | Mail Online.
We can group Muslim sportswomen into three based on their participation in international games. The first group of women is composed of those who are not following the Islamic dress code, some of whom do not believe that such dress code (ie, headscarf) is Islamic. Historically, this group has been involved in international games for much longer than the other two, since modernists in many Muslim societies viewed sports as a means of breaking women’s segregation and including them in public life in the early 20th century. The first Muslim women attended the 1936 Berlin Olympics: Suat Aşeni and Halet Çambel represented Turkey in fencing, 36 years after first women were allowed to compete in the Olympic Games. Turkey, as a country which accepts international dress regulations for different branches of sports, does not have any problem in sending its successful sportswomen to the Olympic Games, as long as the sportswomen follow the international dress codes in sports.
The second group of Muslim women is composed of those who believe in modesty and prefer observing Islam in terms of the dress code as well. These women often face other rules, such as those in international games, which forbid their headscarf based on safety and security concerns. Muslim sports activists propose “safe hijabs” to negotiate with security concerns and suggest alternative styles for different branches. FIFA, for instance, was in contact with designers for an approvable headgear to be used in international soccer games when this article was being written.
A third group of Muslim women however, are not allowed to participate in sports, not because of their religious choices or international game regulations, but because of the regulations of their own country. Iranian sportswomen are an example to this, since the branches of sports Iranian women are allowed to participate are limited: Lida Fariman, Manije Kazemi (archery), Marjan Kalhor (skiing), and Sara Khoshjamal Fekri (taekwondo) are four examples, who have represented Iran in the Olympic games in earlier years within clothes regulated by their country. In these Iranian cases, the dress codes of the sport are in line with Iran’s national dress code for modesty to be preserved. Similarly, and unfortunately, there are countries, such as the Southeast Asian nation of Brunei, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which have not sent any single woman to the Olympic games until 2012. Such outfit regulations influence female citizens of these countries whether the sportwomen themselves are Muslims or not, since they are bounded with the codes both at national and at international level.
What all these groups of Muslim women seem to be sharing is that their bodies are at the center of heated ideological, political, or religious debates and contestations at national and international platforms; as these women are subjected to different forms of idealized discourses and pressures (of secularist and Islamist patriarchies) on multiple fronts.
The fatwas regarding sports are very explanatory in understanding the “Islamic” attitudes. Although Islamic rules do not necessarily pose an obstacle to the participation of women in sports, they can shape the sporting experience of women as gendered subjects. All of the fatwas on Islamic web sites concerning physical exercise begin with the importance of sports for health and encourage individuals to be physically active with reference to hadiths, with minor warnings on violence, fanaticism, or hooliganism. When it comes to women’s involvement in sports, the fatwas start using a more regulative language in details. Almost all of the suggested regulations and rules about women’s involvement in sports are related to gender segregation, and, more importantly, bodily exposure. Fatwas specify several rules that must be followed: First, men and women must be segregated, since mixed environments may open channels for seduction, temptation and corruption. Fatwas reject any physical exercise that stir sexual urge or encourage moral perversion such as women practicing dancing and being watched by the public since each one of the these acts are coded as “sexual(ly appealing).” Indeed, those within Saudi Arabia who oppose the inclusion of women in sports do so because future implications and consequences of women’s involvement in sports might be un-Islamic although there is nothing in Islam that prohibits women from physical activity or even competitive sports.
Most of the time, the most convenient sport for Muslim sportswomen who have concerns about their body movements or Islamic veiling are the branches that do not require too much body movements – the movements which are perceived as ‘sexually appealing’ such as movement of hips (running) and breasts (jumping). The most popular sports for women from predominantly Muslim countries have been athletics, power lifting, fencing, archery, martial arts and table tennis. Such branches are more convenient especially if women are professionals and need to spend hours everyday for training. Women can easily find spaces for training and do not need to seek for special dedicated spaces.
August 14 – The Istanbul Olympic bid for 2020 wound up the London 2012 Games with a stellar double medal boost from two 1500m champions in the women’s race.
International Olympic Committee (IOC) member and head of the Turkish Olympic Committee, Prof. Ugur Erdener, was thrilled to bestow the medals on the gold and silver medal winners from Team Turkey. Erdener also serves as the head of World Archery (WA).
Asli Cakir Alptekin took the gold and Gamze Bulut claimed the silver in front of a packed Olympic stadium as millions watched the poignant scene on TV back in Turkey as Erdener did the honors on the medal podium.
After that performance the team went home to a proud nation ever more excited to live their Olympic Dream of hosting the 2020 Games.
Erdener proclaimed, “Presenting the medals to the two Turkish athletes in front of a packed Olympic stadium was one of the proudest moments of my Olympic career; and now I am determined to experience this again in 2020 with even more Turkish athletes in the Olympic Stadium in Istanbul.
via Olympics Features: Istanbul 2020: Turkish Olympic Spirit buoyant after double medal win at London 2012.