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Taliban suspends chess in Afghanistan over gambling concerns

Taliban suspends chess in Afghanistan over gambling concerns

BBC News11-05-2025

The Taliban government in Afghanistan has banned chess until further notice due to fears the game is a source of gambling. Officials said the game has been prohibited indefinitely until its compatibility with Islamic law can be determined.Chess is the latest sport to be restricted by the Taliban. Women are essentially barred from participating in sport at all.Since seizing power in August 2021, the Taliban has steadily imposed laws and regulations that reflect its austere vision of Islamic law.
On Sunday, Atal Mashwani, the spokesman of the Taliban government's sports directorate, said chess in Islamic sharia law is "considered a means of gambling"."There are religious considerations regarding the sport of chess," he told AFP news agency."Until these considerations are addressed, the sport of chess is suspended in Afghanistan."
How the Taliban stormed across Afghanistan in 10 daysThe Taliban's broken promises
One cafe owner in Kabul, who has hosted informal chess competitions in recent years, said he would respect the decision but it would hurt his business."Young people don't have a lot of activities these days, so many came here everyday," Azizullah Gulzada said. "They would have a cup of tea and challenge their friends to a game of chess."He also noted that chess is played in other Muslim-majority countries.
Last year, the authorities banned free fighting such as mixed martial arts (MMA) in professional competition, saying it was too "violent" and "problematic with respect to sharia"."It was found that the sport is problematic with respect to Sharia and it has many aspects which are contradictory to the teachings of Islam," a Taliban spokesperson said last August.MMA competitions were effectively outlawed in 2021 when the Taliban introduced legislation prohibiting "face-punching".

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timean hour ago

  • The Sun

Fabio Wardley vs Justis Huni LIVE RESULTS: Main event ON NOW in MASSIVE Portman Road heavyweight clash

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A small sport popular in Spain's northern Basque Country has stirred up a political controversy that triggered court action and fanned the region's long-held feelings of nationalism. There has been back-and-forth spats between sports officials and politicians after the Basque Country region was allowed to compete as a nation in international competitions in pelota vasca, a sport that was in the Olympics more than 100 years ago but is now rarely seen in most parts of the world. Even sport's highest court was asked to get involved. The dispute culminated this weekend in what many had thought was an impossible scenario: The Basque Country and Spain playing against each other in an international sporting event — the pelota vasca Nations League. The Basque Country, also known as Euskadi, maintains a strong cultural identity and traditions in a region once scarred by violence. The Basque separatist movement began in the late 1950s and was led by the now-defunct militant group ETA. 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