On the sidelines of a small soccer pitch at a university in Cairo, Hanan Hassan remembers starting out as a referee and the response she got from one female player’s mother.
“In a loud voice she yelled as she was looking toward me: ‘God bless you my daughter and I hope that my own daughter becomes like you,’” Hassan said.
For years, women referees in Egypt have officiated at lower-level matches, but now have their sights set on the Egyptian Premier League.
Photo: AFP
“My colleagues abroad have already presided over the men’s tournaments in their countries, so why not in Egypt?” fellow referee Mona Atalla said.
Dressed in a pink shirt with the FIFA logo, Hassan and Atalla, both 37, presided over the evening all-women friendly at Ain Shams University.
While Hassan started her career as a professional referee in 2006, Atalla was part of the first group of female referees registered in Egypt in 1998, who were allowed to oversee all-women and junior male tournaments.
After years on the pitch, Atalla and her female colleague, Pousy Said, were in April finally allowed to officiate a match in the men’s second and third divisions.
The decision by the Egyptian Football Association Referees Committee raised hopes that women referees will soon be holding the red and yellow cards in the top-tier Premier League.
Atalla has already worked at international women’s tournaments, including the Under-20 World Cup.
“Our expertise is not inferior to that of the male referees, and the law [on soccer refereeing] is the same and should be implemented,” she said.
Hassan, who also has an international referee license, said that women might actually have an advantage on the pitch.
“If the men’s game does include some violence, the presence of a female referee could push some players to be more appropriate,” she said. “It is natural for me to hand my decisions with a smile so that I absorb the anger of the person in front of me.”
There are just 15 women working as referees in Egypt out of 60 registered with the association, referee committee head Azab Haggag said.
There is no reason for women not to officiate more high-profile matches, “but it has to be done gradually so that the fans are more prepared for it and accept it,” Haggag said.
Atalla, whose brothers and husband are also referees, said she has seen attitudes change over the years.
At first “some people saw it as strange for women to be playing football, and even more so for them to be officials ... with the decision held in her hands,” she said.
“As the job was being practiced by women who do their jobs perfectly, people have become very proud of their presence in the field,” Atalla said.
However, Haggag said the association has received some complaints from female players.
Norhan Hamdy, a 21-year-old who was playing in the game at Ain Shams University, is one of the players who objects to women referees.
“As a female football player I prefer that a man officiates my games,” said Hamdy, who believes that some women referees are influenced by their emotions and can be biased toward their friends.
“We must fight this thought,” Atalla said, determined to see women referees promoted to the higher leagues.
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