“Veil can be dropped on certain occasions but not the way the girl is going about and playing in all those countries,” the scholar told a private news channel on Wednesday.
The comments of the scholar were extensively aired by the private television channel that also sought the views of women’s organisations on the subject, stirring a major controversy. Maintaining stoic silence on the issue, Sania, who comes from a devout Muslim family, passed the query off saying that she has nothing to say about it.
When asked if she faced any racial discrimination during her Grand Slam tournaments, Sania answered in the negative, saying that only a few people commented on interesting slogans on her T-shirts.
“No one said that a girl from a third world country is playing the fourth round of a Grand Slam. I never faced such a situation,” the 18-year-old Hyderabadi said in a press conference organised by her sponsor GVK Reddy on Thursday.
Commenting on the encroachments of her privacy by the media and the fans alike, Sania said, “slowly I’m getting used to it. I get noticed wherever I go and I become focal point of media and my dress and other things get noticed. It’s strange but I’m getting used to it”.
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