Fri 30 August 2024:
The General Directorate of Physical Education and Sport of Afghanistan on Thursday announced that Mixed Martial Arts (MMA) fights in Afghanistan have been banned.
The directorate said in a statement that concerns had been raised in the past that the sport was not compliant with Sharia law.
“After comprehensive investigations, it was found that free fighting sports have problems from the Sharia point of view, and most of its elements are in conflict with the teachings of the Islamic religion, and for this reason, the sport of free fighting (MMA) has no right to operate in Afghanistan and is prohibited,” read the statement.
“The free fighting games are banned from now on and no one is allowed to practice them,” a spokesman for the Taliban’s sports department, Atal Mashwani, told The Telegraph on Thursday.
“Those athletes who were involved in the sport can move to another sport of their choice and continue their activities,” he said.
According to Mashwani, the decision followed an investigation into the sport’s compliance with Islamic law. “After the investigation, it was decided that the sport should be banned.”
__________________________________________________________________________
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaAtNxX8fewmiFmN7N22
__________________________________________________________________________
The spokesman noted that Afghan sports authorities do not have statistics on the number of athletes involved in the MMA, as the athletes “were part of private organizations and were not registered with the sports department.”
The Mixed Martial Arts Federation of Afghanistan, which was founded in 2008, had become popular among young people. In 2015, the first private MMA tournament was set up in Afghanistan.
The Afghanistan Fighting Championship (AFC) and Truly Grand Fighting Championship (TGFC) hosted dozens of fights before the Taliban returned to power in 2021. However, competitions were soon thereafter effectively outlawed after legislation prohibiting “face-punching” was introduced.
According to media reports, most Afghan MMA fighters had left the country long before the latest announcement. Several Afghan athletes who competed at the Paris Games, on either the national or the Refugee Olympic teams, had originally been involved in martial arts. Due mainly to safety concerns, MMA is not recognized by the International Olympic Committee.
The Taliban first came to power in Afghanistan in the 1990s but was ousted in 2001 during the US-led invasion. The Taliban regained power in 2021 after a 20-year insurgency, forcing Afghanistan’s internationally recognized president, Ashraf Ghani, to flee the country.
SOURCE: INDEPENDENT PRESS AND NEWS AGENCIES
______________________________________________________________
FOLLOW INDEPENDENT PRESS:
WhatsApp CHANNEL
https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaAtNxX8fewmiFmN7N22
TWITTER (CLICK HERE)
https://twitter.com/IpIndependent
FACEBOOK (CLICK HERE)
https://web.facebook.com/ipindependent
YOUTUBE (CLICK HERE)
https://www.youtube.com/@ipindependent
Think your friends would be interested? Share this story!