2011 marathon in Gaza
2011 marathon in GazaAFP file

Gaza's third international marathon has been cancelled after Hamas refused to allow women to run, the UN agency for “Palestinian” refugees said on Tuesday.

UNRWA officials said more than 800 people, nearly half of them women, had signed up to participate in this year's race, which runs the entire length of the coastal territory and was to have taken place on April 10.

"UNRWA regrets to announce that it has had to cancel the third UNRWA marathon which was to be held on 10 April," a statement said, according to the AFP news agency. 

"This disappointing decision follows discussions with the authorities in Gaza who have insisted that no women should participate."

While Israel faces ongoing accusations of “apartheid” and allegations of implementing discriminatory polices, the real perpetrators of such crimes are the Arab regimes and terrorist organizations like Hamas.

In fact, the PLO last week called for runners and sponsors of the 2013 Jerusalem Marathon to boycott the race, claiming support implies acceptance of Israel's “illegal annexation” of eastern Jerusalem.

UNRWA officials said 807 people had entered this year's race -- 551 locals and 256 international runners. Of that number, 385 are female -- 266 from Gaza and 119 from overseas.

Another 1,600 schoolchildren, girls and boys, were also to have joined the race.

UNRWA spokesman Adnan Abu Hasna told AFP that the decision to cancel was taken after the ruling Islamist movement refused to back down over the issue of women and men running together.

"Hamas refused to let women participate in this very important marathon. They told us about this condition several days ago and we went into long negotiations but we failed," he said.

"They pushed us to cancel the marathon and I'm very sorry because it is a very important event for Palestinian refugees."

Two international women runners participated in the first Gaza marathon in 2011, alongside hundreds of women and schoolgirls who joined the relay race or walked part of it, with more joining last year.

"Hamas claims that women have never been allowed to run, which is not true, then they decided that only local women could run. Then they decided not to let any women participate," a diplomatic source in Gaza told AFP.

A senior Hamas official confirmed the ban on women runners but expressed regret that UNRWA had cancelled the entire event.

"We regret this decision to cancel the marathon but we don't want men and women running together," said Abdessalam Siyyam, cabinet secretary of the Hamas government.

"We did not tell UNRWA to cancel the marathon and we haven't prevented it, but we laid down some conditions: We don't want women and men mixing in the same place," he told the news agency, citing Islamic law and traditions.

"We don't want any women running uncovered," he added, indicating the ban was only in place for female runners aged 16 and over.

UNRWA said it was working on an alternative program of events for those who had signed up for the race, which would have seen entrants running either the full 42-kilometre (26-mile) marathon, the half marathon or a 10-kilometre dash.

"UNRWA sincerely regrets the inconvenience this causes those who planned to participate in the marathon," the agency said.