Kuwait AL Nadi Club's table tennis player Kifaya Al Awardi plays, during the Women's Games, at Salwa Al Sabah Sports Center in Qurein, Kuwait, on Thursday. The event is part of a new initiative launching sports leagues for women, including basketball, table tennis and athletic leagues for the first time in Kuwait illustrating how the landscape for women athletes is improving across the Arabian Gulf. — AP KUWAIT CITY — Muneera Al-Shatti has loved playing basketball since she was a child but it wasn't until Thursday that she had chance to show off her skills at a public arena in Kuwait. As part of a new initiative launching sports leagues for women, Al-Shatti and her teammates from Salwa Al-Sabah club downed Qadsiya club 63-13 in a game that attracted several hundred men and female fans. The initiative to launch basketball, table tennis and athletic leagues for the first time in Kuwait illustrates how the landscape for women athletes is improving across the Arabian Gulf. Several of the players wore leggings and covered their heads with hijab. Others, however, wore shorts and T-shirts. “A competition like this should have happened a long time ago,” said Al-Shatti, who has played in tournaments overseas and only heard about the league in her home country while playing in neighboring Bahrain. “But I am glad it finally took place. We've been trying to do this for a long time and they have promised that more sports will be included in future leagues.” Helped by government support, increased education, football leagues for girls in the Gulf have started up in Qatar and United Arab Emirates. Saudi Arabia recently announced it would allow sports in private schools as long as they abide by the rules of Shariah. Saudi Arabia's decision is part of a wider package of reforms targeting women. The private schools' announcement also follows a decision last year in the Kingdom to allow two female athletes to compete in the London Olympic Games. The largest female university in the Kingdom — Princess Nora Bint Abdul Rahman University — has a swimming pool, tennis court and exercise area for its students. The 1970s were described as the golden era where women were allowed to freely participate in sports in Kuwait, according to Naeema Al-Sabah, the head of the Women's Sports Federation. But the low point came a few years back when a Kuwaiti women's football team was publicly denounced after returning from playing a regional tournament in neighboring United Arab Emirates. “We're taking baby steps toward progress,” Al-Sabah said. “As with any society that is religiously strict, we need to test the waters and take small steps. Everyone in Kuwait now values sports. You see people walking and jogging every day. There is this increasing interest in playing sports in general.” Al-Shatti said the best sign that things are changing was the number of women and girls who turned out for the basketball game. A music teacher who also cycles and jogs with her husband, Al-Shatti is only hoping to get more chances to play. “It felt like the first step toward a better future for sports for us here in Kuwait,” she said after her team's victory. – AP