
Chelsea
have been quick to issue a statement saying there is no place for
discrimination, including sexism, in football.
The Premier League leaders were responding to footage released recently
showing obscene and sexist abuse being directed at their club doctor Eva
Carneiro.
And the Blues say such behaviour is ‘unacceptable,’ a message supported by
the body Women in Sport which says they back Chelsea’s call for ‘an end to
sexist chanting in football’.
The focus of this recent abuse, Carneiro, worked with the British Olympic
Medical Institute at the Beijing Games, before joining Chelsea six years ago
as reserve team doctor. She started working with the first team in 2011.
She has been the target of abuse by football supporters on a number of
occasions and a Chelsea statement issued on Friday reads: "The issue of
equality is one we take extremely seriously.
“We abhor discrimination in all its forms, including sexism. Such behaviour
is totally unacceptable and we want it eradicated from the game."
Women in Sport have also issued a statement, which says: "As a charity
campaigning to transform sport for the benefit of every woman and girl in
the UK, we are wholly and entirely supportive of efforts being made to
eradicate sexist chanting in football.
“We welcome the efforts of organisations like Women in Football and Kick It
Out in challenging the prevailing attitude that sexist language and
behaviours should go unpunished and labelled as ‘banter’.
“Women have the right to work in sport, as in any workplace or environment,
without fear of abuse or discrimination.
“Sport as a whole has a responsibility to stand up for the rights of those
women that work in sport, as well as those who aspire to do so.”
It has been reported that, so far this season, a total of 25 complaints of
sexist abuse have been made to either anti-discrimination campaign group
Kick It Out or equality group Women in Football.
On Friday, FIFA president Sepp Blatter reiterated his call to have female
representation on the executive committee of football's world governing
body.
And he criticised the continental confederations for, so far, failing to
make this happen by saying: “In 2011, at the end of the Congress, I said we
must have at least one woman on the executive committee.
"In all the confederations, there is no woman and that's a pity, we should
change in the future."
Blatter has also asked Iran to end its ban on women watching football
matches, and he wrote in FIFA's weekly magazine: "When I travelled to Iran
in November 2013, I raised the topic at my meeting with the President of
Iran Hassan Rouhani.
“I came away with the impression that this intolerable situation could
change over the medium term.
"However, nothing has happened. A collective ‘stadium ban’ still applies to
women in Iran, despite the existence of a thriving women's football
organisation. This cannot continue.”