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Tanzania: Outcry after President Samia calls women footballers 'flat-chested'

Tanzania: Outcry after President Samia calls women footballers 'flat-chested'
, Wednesday, 25 August 2021 (17:49 IST)
Tanzania's president has been criticized for describing the country's female footballers as having "flat-chests" and being unattractive for marriage. Samia Suluhu Hassan made the remarks while hosting Tanzania's Under-23 men's football team at State House in the coastal city of Dar es Salaam.

The president said that while female footballers were making the East African country proud by winning trophies, some did not stand a chance of getting married because of the way they looked: "If we bring them here and line them up, for those with flat-chests, you might think they are men — not women." She said, while some sportswomen were married, most of them were not, "and for the way they are, a life of marriage is a just a dream."



Discriminatory remarks

Samia Suluhu Hassan became president in March when she succeeded John Magufuli after his sudden death. Shortly after the 61-year-old took over the leadership from her predecessor, she changed the countries approach to deal with the Covid-19 virus and started a vaccination campaign. She urged all Tanzanians to get vaccinated and took her jab in public to encourage others.

Her move was widely welcomed as a breakthrough since Tanzania was one of the last countries in the world to start inoculating its people.But now the tide has turned, and Tanzania's first female president has come under fire for her discriminatory remarks on female soccer player's looks.

Her comments didn't go well with the social media users after the video where she is speaking about women footballers went viral. One of the users, Mwanahamisi Singano, wrote: "This woman wants to turn Tanzania into Afghanistan. Where are the rights of our women? Mama, encourage our African women to excel in what they are good at."

A need to challenge stereotypes

Singano, a female activist, told DW interview that President Hassan's statement is a humiliation to women. "Especially African women as we know for so long their female body has been objectified," Singano said. "We have been pushed to fit certain categories of beauty. So it is really sad to hear that the president is uttering those words in a manner that says: if you do not have these qualities, you are not woman enough. You are not attractive."

The world needs to move towards looking at women on what they have accomplished. "There are people who find this statement normal as we live in a society where we have normalized objectifying women as we have normalized looking at women in terms of marriage."

But as president, Hassan needs to set the standards high, the gender activist said. adding that Samia needs to challenge the norm, the stereotype. She added that she had expected the president to speak about young Tanzanian women being courageous, strong and have made this country proud in the utmost respect and giving them the spirit and courage.

"Will they now – after those remarks – be inspired to get into sports?"

Women players deserve respect

Like many other Tanzanians, Catherine Ruge, head of the women's wing of the opposition Chadema party and a former Member of Parliament, is angry about the president's words and says that humiliation is a matter of concern. She tweeted:  "All women deserve respect."

But for Sanna Garraway, a soccer player at FC St. Pauli in Hamburg, the president's statement and her concerns about the future of female players is not too much of a surprise. "It is precisely these stereotypes that the Tanzanian women players told us about, and it is the typical prejudices they encounter that lead to structural and social barriers," Garraway said as she referred to a sports exchange with the Simba Queens Club players in Dar es Salaam two years ago.

They also discussed gender equality during a workshop sponsored by Germany's ministry for economic cooperation. Garraway said that the question of their financial independence or the perspective after their soccer career was also a problem that the female players deal with.

"As a woman, this is much more difficult to achieve. But, at the same time, male professional footballers do not have to worry about this, as the salary differences are still high, especially in football," Garraway told DW.

Praise for Tanzania's Simba Queens

According to Garraway, Tanzania's national women's team is very successful. Moreover, people should not forget that the president is supporting women in sports. " I find it particularly disappointing that on the one hand, the president promotes women in sports and at the same time serves these stereotypes."

This is a dilemma for a local female soccer coach in Tanzania who finds it difficult to talk about these two sides of the coin. Choosing to stay anonymous, she stressed that she is very content that President Suluhu Hassan is sponsoring the first Women's Championship in East Africa: "We can really build up a lot on this."

The 2021 Confederation of African Football (CAF) Women's Champion League in East Africa takes place from August 28th to September 9th in Nairobi, Kenya.

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