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The New Daily
The New Daily
Sport
Nelson Acosta

Green light for female Cuban boxers

Legnis Cala, centre, talks with fellow female boxers during a training session in Havana, Cuba after officials announced on Monday that female boxers would be able to compete professionally in the country for the first time ever. Photo: AAP

Boxing powerhouse Cuba have given the green light to women who wish to partake in tournaments for the first time since Fidel Castro’s 1959 revolution.

The Caribbean island – long hailed for their top-ranked men’s boxers – have won 41 gold medals in the Olympic games since Munich in 1972, topping global charts.

But Cuba’s aspiring women boxers, who for decades have banned from competing in competition, until now have had no choice but to migrate to reach the highest levels of their sport.

“Women’s boxing in Cuba … is going to bring us to the international medal table,” said Ariel Sainz, vice president of Cuba’s Institute of Sports (INDER), at a news conference on Monday after announcing the government’s decision to legalise participation by women in the sport.

Mr Sainz said Cuba’s recently approved family code, a set of regulations aimed at wiping out discrimination against women and the LGBTQI community in Cuba’s ‘machista’ culture, provided the legal underpinnings for the move.

“We have a [law] now that assures equality between men and women,” Mr Sainz said.

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) announced in 2009 that women could begin competing in boxing at the Games.

Three years later the first female boxers competed in the London 2012 Games, and later in Rio de Janeiro in 2016 and Tokyo in 2020.

Cuba were until now one of a handful of countries that did not practice women’s boxing among the 202 nations affiliated with the International Boxing Association (IBA).

“We have lost time, but we will make up for it,” Alberto Puig, president of the Cuban Boxing Federation, said.

Authorities on Monday did not say why women were prohibited from boxing in Cuba.

Women on the island are allowed to take part in wrestling, weightlifting, karate, taekwondo and judo.

The addition of boxing quickly made waves in gyms in the Cuban capital of Havana, where for years women have trained, only to be forced to leave the island if they wished to compete.

“After years of sacrifice and effort, the flame of boxing was beginning to flicker out for me,” said Legnis Cala, a 57kg boxer who strapped on her gloves with the news and began to pound a gym sandbag.

“This is a dream come true for me.”

– AAP
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