A 12-year-old girl withdrew from a national chess competition in Malaysia after some of the organizers said her knee-length skirt was “improper” and violated the tournament’s dress code.
This was revealed by the girl’s coach through a Facebook post which quickly went viral. Kaushal Khandhar wrote that during the tournament, an organizer approached the girl and her mother about the “seductive” dress which is deemed a “temptation from a certain angle far, far away.”
The dress code in Malaysia’s chess tournaments simply states that a player must have a “dignified appearance”.
The mother tried to buy a new dress but stores in the area were already closed. Embarrassed about the accusation of wearing an “improper” dress, the girl withdrew from the tournament.
Kaushal Khandhar uploaded a photo of the girl’s skirt to prove that it was not improper. He added that the girl’s family is demanding an apology from the National Scholastic Chess Championship:
The Facebook post sparked public outrage against the organizers of the chess tournament. Some believe it reflects the rising influence of conservative forces and religious hardliners in Malaysia.
The tournament’s director denied that he forced the girl to withdraw from the tournament. He filed a case in the police headquarters after receiving numerous online hate messages and death threats. During a press conference, he said he was being “slandered” because of the issue:
After initially probing the incident, the Malaysian Chess Federation said that the girl was not disqualified because of her dress. It refused to continue the investigation after learning that a case has already been filed in the police.
Based on news reports, the organizers of the chess tournament are denying that they disqualified the girl — which is true because the girl withdrew from the tournament. But they were silent as to whether they called the attention of the girl and her mother about the “improper” dress.
The Women, Family and Community Development Ministry issued a statement urging the Malaysian Chess Federation to look deeper into the issue:
Peter Long of the Institute of Chess Excellence, which is also the Malaysian Chess Federation's National Chess Academy, advised the organizers to apologize to the girl and her family:
Do I have to remind us all that we are talking here about a 12-year-old girl here? I really want to believe that we understand the welfare of the child is of utmost importance.
Writer Terence Fernandez insisted that “the police should not only be looking into the claims of the breach of dress code but the fact that a child was possibly sexualised by an adult.”