Captains can wear a choice of eight armbands at the Women’s World Cup

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A combination mock-up picture shows the armbands that Fifa says team captains will be permitted to wear during the 2023 Women's World Cup.

These mock-ups show the armbands that Fifa says team captains will be permitted to wear during the 2023 Women's World Cup.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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Captains will be permitted to wear armbands with messages about inclusion, gender equality and peace at the Women’s World Cup which kicks off on July 20, an about-face for Fifa

after rainbow armbands were not allowed at the 2022 men’s tournament in Qatar.

Team skippers will have the choice of eight topics as part of Fifa’s Football Unites The World campaign, selected in consultation with the 32 participating teams, players and United Nations agencies.

“After some very open talks with stakeholders, including member associations and players, we have decided to highlight a series of social causes – from inclusion to gender equality, from peace to ending hunger, from education to tackling domestic violence – during all 64 matches at the Fifa Women’s World Cup,” Fifa president Gianni Infantino said.

Seven of the armbands are “Unite for” either “Inclusion”, which features a heart in a rainbow of colours, “Indigenous People”, “Gender Equality”, “Education for All”, “End Violence Against Women”, “Peace” and “Zero Hunger”. An eighth armband is “Football is Joy, Peace, Hope, Love, Passion”.

The England men’s captain Harry Kane, alongside his counterparts from Wales, Belgium, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Germany and Denmark, had planned to

wear “OneLove” armbands at the World Cup in 2022

to protest Qatar’s laws against same-sex relationships.

In a joint statement, however, the federations from those countries said that Fifa had threatened to issue yellow cards to any player wearing it.

Infantino said in March that Fifa had learnt from the “OneLove” armband fiasco, and promised a solution for the women’s tournament in Australia and New Zealand, which is expected to be followed by over two billion people globally.

“Football unites the world and our global events, such as the Fifa Women’s World Cup, have a unique power to bring people together and provide joy, excitement and passion,” he added in Friday’s statement. “But football does even more than that – it can shine the spotlight on very important causes in our society.”

Captains have three options – they can wear the “Football Unites the World” armband, an armband corresponding to the theme of their choice for the entire tournament, or the armband corresponding to the theme of the specific match day.

“It’s not just about what happens on the pitch,” Fifa’s secretary-general Fatma Samoura said. “We are committed to using football’s power as a force for good... United, we can make a difference.”

The messages will also be promoted through pitch-side digital LED boards, large flags presented on the pitch, giant screens in stadiums and via social media. REUTERS, AFP

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