Rukhsana Parveen Explained

Rukhsana Parveen
Fullname:Rukhsana Parveen
Nationality:Pakistani
Birth Date:1992 5, mf=yes
Birth Place:Pakistan
Height:1.62m (05.31feet)
Weight:64kg (141lb)
Sport:Boxing
Show-Medals:yes

Rukhsana Parveen (born 5 May 1992)[1] also spelled Rukhsana Perveen[2] is a female boxer from Pakistan. In 2016, she along with two other team mates became the first women boxers from Pakistan to compete in an international competition when they participated at the South Asian Games in Guwahati, India.[3] She was also included in the first ever team sent to the Asian Games.

Career

Parveen has stated that she was inspired to take up boxing after watching the biographical movie of the Indian boxer, Mary Kom.[4] She took up the sport in 2015 and had been coached by Nauman Karim for only eight months before she was selected to participate in the 2016 South Asian Games held in Guwahati, India.

National

Representing Punjab, Parveen won gold in the light weight category at the First National Women Boxing Championship held in Lahore in 2018.[5]

International

South Asian Games

Parveen was being coached by Shehnaz Kamal[6] when she along with Khoushleem Bano and Sofia Javed were scouted by the Pakistan Boxing Federation and included into the team to compete at the 2016 South Asian Games held in Guwahati, India. Parveen reached the semi-finals in the 60 kg category and earned a bronze medal.[7] With this medal, she became the second Pakistani woman (after Sofia Javed) to win an international medal in boxing. At the 2019 South Asian Games in Kathmandu, Nepal, Parveen repeated her performance by claiming another bronze but this time in the 64 kg category.[8]

Asian Games

To prepare for the 2018 Asian Games held in Jakarta, Indonesia, Parveen along with five other women were part of a training camp held in the capital. Islamabad.[9] She along with Razia Bano was then selected[10] as part of Pakistan's first ever team to compete at the continental level where she participated in the 60 kg category.[11] [12] [13] In the round of 16 she lost to the Indian boxer, Pavitra.[2]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Biography, Olympic Council of Asia. 2020-11-14. www.ocagames.com.
  2. Web site: August 25, 2018. Asian Games: Boxer Pavitra beats Pakistan's Rukhsana Parveen to make it to quarters. 2020-11-14. Mumbai Mirror. en.
  3. Web site: Pakistan to hold first-ever women boxing championship. 2020-11-14. www.pakistantoday.com.pk.
  4. Web site: Pak women pugilists inspired by Mary Kom. 2020-11-15. Tribuneindia News Service. en.
  5. Web site: Punjab dominate National Women Boxing. 2020-11-14. www.thenews.com.pk. en.
  6. Web site: 2018-03-13. Women boxers warm up for Pakistan's Provincial Games. 2020-11-15. Arab News. en.
  7. https://sportsboard.punjab.gov.pk/system/files/12th%20SAF%20Games.pdf 12th SAF Games - Results
  8. Web site: Boxing. 2020-11-14. South Asian Games Nepal 2019. en-US.
  9. Web site: Training camp of women boxers underway in Islamabad. 2020-11-15. www.radio.gov.pk. en.
  10. Web site: 2018-08-10. PBF announces eight members boxing team for Asian Games 2018. 2020-11-15. ARYSports.tv.
  11. Web site: Pakistan's women boxing team will be done a historical debut in the upcoming Asian Games. 2020-11-14. ASBCNews. en-US.
  12. Web site: Olympic Council of Asia. 2020-11-14. www.ocagames.com.
  13. Web site: Asian Games: Rukhsana, Razia named in boxing team. 2020-11-15. www.thenews.com.pk. en.