Morocco ladies’s group captain Ghizlane Chebbak was subjected to a query the place a BBC reporter requested her that if any member of her group was homosexual and what it was wish to have a homosexual relationship within the nation.
The query which was deemed inappropriate on account of the truth that same-sex sexual exercise between males or ladies is against the law in Morocco with a most penalty of three years’ imprisonment and a tremendous, pressured BBC to apologize on behalf of their reporter.
“In Morocco, it’s unlawful to have a homosexual relationship. Do you’ve got any homosexual gamers in your squad and what’s life like for them in Morocco?” the journalist had requested in a press convention to Chebbak.
Vor dem Spiel gegen Deutschland wurde Marokkos Kapitänin Ghizlane Chebbak gefragt, ob es homosexuelle Spielerinnen im Workforce gibt und wie es ihnen in ergeht – homosexuelle Handlungen sind in Marokko unlawful. Eine FIFA-Sprecherin wies die Frage als “politisch” ab.#FIFAWWC #GERMAR pic.twitter.com/olvc9j1Q6b
— Deutschlandfunk Sport (@DLF_Sport) July 24, 2023
An official moderating the press convention would then lower in and say, “Sorry it is a very political query so we’ll simply keep on with questions regarding soccer,” because the bemused Morocco captain appeared on.
The journalist, nevertheless, wouldn’t yield, saying “It’s not political, it’s about folks. Please permit her to reply.” Chebbak then smiled and shook her head.
A BBC spokesperson later needed to apologize for the query, saying,” “We recognise that the query was inappropriate. We had no intention to trigger any hurt or misery.”
In the meantime, Morocco’s debut recreation on the Ladies’s World Cup resulted in a 6-0 loss to two-time champion Germany in what head coach Reynald Pedros described as a “David versus Goliath” contest.
Germany is ranked No. 2 and the Atlas Lionesses are No. 72 and the primary Arab or North African group to qualify.
The margin of defeat on Monday was the largest up to now on the match the place Morocco is considered one of eight groups on debut.