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Taliban ban women's sport amid fears that cricketers will expose their faces

They're just jumping on every opportunity since sandpapergate to change that perception by showing a holier-than-thou attitude.

It's actually entirely with Australia's stance on refusing sporting ties with South Africa during apartheid.

We have an occupying dictatorship discriminating against one bracket of people for a feature which is not within the persons control.

There will be zero sporting ties while we are still seeing interviews with families buying & selling 11 year old girls and womens volleyball players are being murdered by the govt.
 
There will be zero sporting ties while we are still seeing interviews with families buying & selling 11 year old girls and womens volleyball players are being murdered by the govt.

This sounds very selective. Why is Australia not severing trade ties with China after all the horrible things they've done to the Uighur community ?

It's clear that Australia never wanted to play Afghanistan in the first place and took the first chance out.
 
It's actually entirely with Australia's stance on refusing sporting ties with South Africa during apartheid.

We have an occupying dictatorship discriminating against one bracket of people for a feature which is not within the persons control.

There will be zero sporting ties while we are still seeing interviews with families buying & selling 11 year old girls and womens volleyball players are being murdered by the govt.

Yes and playing with Israel where there are violation of human rights daily is purely ethical.
 
This sounds very selective. Why is Australia not severing trade ties with China after all the horrible things they've done to the Uighur community ?

It's clear that Australia never wanted to play Afghanistan in the first place and took the first chance out.

Australia isn't very relevant; they can do what they want. ICC has quite simple laws regarding gender equality. China is denying genocide of Uyghurs, whereas Afghanistan has openly banned women from participating in cricket.

You understand the distinction? Official discrimination is the key here.
 
You understand the distinction? Official discrimination is the key here.

Australia aren't going to take a stance against China even if the latter engage in official discimination. No need to pretend otherwise. Did their government censure the Saudis when women there were banned from driving a vehicle? Nope.
They did not want to host Afghanistan. Simples.
 
so what disturbs you more?

Women getting ignored again
or
that men's cricket team losing Test status?
What an absurd question!!! How is the oppression and marginalization of an entire gender even remotely comparable to the later?
 
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The armed group made some compromises and threw its weight behind the Afghan cricket team, leaving the International Cricket Council in a tight spot.

Afghanistan's national cricket team was quite lucky to participate in the ongoing T20 World Cup championship in the UAE. Next time, the 11-member squad may not be able to compete in such a high profile game because the International Cricket Council (ICC) is yet to decide whether to suspend the Afghan team's membership or let them play.

The reason? The ICC - the global governing body for cricket - does not recognise the Taliban as a legitimate ruling force in Afghanistan.

A source on Afghanistan's Cricket Board told TRT World that because the ICC had drafted the match fixtures for the T20 World Cup before the Taliban took over Kabul on August 15, they could not disqualify the team at the last minute.

The Taliban also had a bone to pick with the ICC. They wanted the governing body to replace the Afghan flag with its own, plus they requested changes to the country's national anthem.

"They wanted players to sing the anthem without music," the cricket board official, who wished to remain anonymous, said.

The two sides eventually resolved their differences, allowing the Afghan team to participate in the championship.

"For the ICC, it was not an easy choice to disqualify the Afghan team at the last minute. They had to set their politics aside. They knew they would lose tens of thousands of TV viewers and hundreds of live spectators who love to watch world-famous Afghan cricketers like Rashid Khan, Mohammad Nabi and Mujeeb Zadran play," the board official added.

And for the Taliban, letting the team compete in the T20 world championship was in line with the group's attempts to legitimise their rule in the eyes of the world.

A few weeks before the World Cup games began, however, speculations were rife that the Taliban might ban the cricket team from playing in the oil-rich kingdom.

But those fears were allayed on October 6, when Qatar's foreign ministry granted permission, at the request of the Taliban’s interim government, for the Afghanistan team to take part in a training camp ahead of the World Cup. Afghans inside and outside their home country rejoiced.

The Afghan national team is now playing in Group 2 of the World Cup along with Pakistan, India, New Zealand, Scotland and Namibia. Its first win against Scotland on October 25 sparked massive celebrations in Afghanistan, which contrasted sharply with the general uncertainty in the country.

During the initial stage, the team showed promise, winning two games out of four, and in the process they proved to be a uniting factor in a deeply fragmented Afghan society. Taliban leaders, ex-government officials, and several politicians - including former presidents - congratulated the team. For a fleeting moment, the countrywide celebrations blurred the lines of ideological divisions.

This is even more impressive considering professional cricket in Afghanistan is a relatively recent phenomenon. It emerged mainly in the refugee camps in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa during the mid-1990s. In the last two decades cricket has seen major progress, and today it is the most popular sport in the country.

Afghanistan's first win against Scotland on October 25 sparked massive celebrations in Afghanistan, which contrasted sharply with the general uncertainty in the country.
Afghanistan's first win against Scotland on October 25 sparked massive celebrations in Afghanistan, which contrasted sharply with the general uncertainty in the country. (AP)
Sports minus women

It wasn't always an easy road. During Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001, men’s sport was strictly controlled in Afghanistan, while women were barred entirely from playing any sport. In addition, the Taliban asked sportsmen to wear “appropriate” clothes and prohibited games during prayer times.

Today, though, the Taliban says things are different. The group’s current head of the National Olympic Committee, Nazar Mohammad Mutmaeen, told TRT World that no sports are currently banned in Afghanistan.

“Currently, there are 52 athletic federations under the Olympic Committee in the country that consist of different sports. Not even a single sport is banned. All federations are active and running.”

Mutmaeen emphasized that various sports played during the past 20 years will be played under Taliban rule — minus women.

“We respect the International Olympic Committee’s rules and regulations and we are ready to work with them.”

Then there was the issue of international conflict. Before cricket became a popular game throughout Afghanistan, it was treated more like a Pakistani sport.

“After I came to Afghanistan (from Pakistan) in 2001, a lot of people in Kabul didn’t know much about cricket. People thought it was a Pakistani game,” former Afghan cricketer Raees Ahmadzai told TRT World. Ahmadzai is currently the head coach of Afghanistan’s Under-19 cricket team.

This perception was changed after Afghanistan’s cricket team earned international achievements. “Cricket then became the number one most popular sport,” Ahmadzai added.

Interestingly, it was during the Taliban’s first rule in Afghanistan that the national cricket team traveled to Pakistan in its first ever foreign trip. The event paved the way for the Afghanistan Cricket Federation (currently Afghanistan Cricket Board) to then engage with the Asian Cricket Council.

Established in 1995 by Afghan players, the Afghanistan Cricket Federation was recognized under the Taliban’s Olympic Committee. However, the recognition was initially rejected as officials in the Olympic Committee considered cricket a Pakistani game.

At the time, the Taliban government did not have a budget for sports. As a result, the Afghan cricket players and leadership sought funds from various embassies and merchants. It was thus ordinary people who played a more significant role in promoting the game than previous Afghan governments.

“In the beginning, we didn’t have the government’s support, and there were no grounds and sports academies in the country,” the former national cricket player Ahmadzai explained.

“It was more of the efforts of cricket players and the Cricket Federation leadership at that time that helped Afghanistan’s cricket grow.”

Then there's the thorny issue of women and the Taliban. The nation's membership in the International Olympic Committee was suspended in 1999 because it didn’t include any women's sports. This was due to the Taliban’s overall ban on women in athletics. Afghanistan was subsequently banned from the 2000 Summer Games in Sydney.

Today the Taliban stresses its commitment to national cricket. A senior Taliban member, Anas Haqqani, was among the first to travel to Kabul from Doha, Qatar, after the Taliban took control of the capital. During his first meetings in Kabul, he met with Afghanistan’s national cricket players and provided them assurance about security and continued support.

Raees Ahmadzai, the former cricketer, says they have not encountered any problems after the fall of the former government. “They (the Taliban) have provided reassurance to cricket players. So there is no problem yet.”

“During the new government, our Under-19 cricket team travelled to Bangladesh and won the match,” he said.

Ahmadzai also mentioned that the Cricket Board, Afghanistan’s official governing body of cricket, has not received any communication that implies the Taliban’s interference in cricket.

Naseeb Khan Zadran, the Cricket Board CEO, told TRT World that the Taliban’s government has provided necessary support to the country’s team.

The national cricket team would have missed the T20 World Cup if the new government did not facilitate their travel to Qatar, says Zadran.

The board’s Media Manager, Abdullah Khan Paktani, said the Taliban’s government had supported the board in implementing the International Cricket Council’s requirement for participation at the World Cup championship. “The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has so far respected the principle of separating sports from politics,” he said.

The Under-19 cricket team head coach stated that the cricket players have made outstanding achievements in different categories and therefore, "cricket should be supported.”

“No one should have a problem with this sport,” he said. “It will be wise to pay more attention to the sport.”

https://www.trtworld.com/magazine/the-taliban-s-love-for-cricket-and-icc-s-dilemma-51381
 
The armed group made some compromises and threw its weight behind the Afghan cricket team, leaving the International Cricket Council in a tight spot.

Afghanistan's national cricket team was quite lucky to participate in the ongoing T20 World Cup championship in the UAE. Next time, the 11-member squad may not be able to compete in such a high profile game because the International Cricket Council (ICC) is yet to decide whether to suspend the Afghan team's membership or let them play.

The reason? The ICC - the global governing body for cricket - does not recognise the Taliban as a legitimate ruling force in Afghanistan.

A source on Afghanistan's Cricket Board told TRT World that because the ICC had drafted the match fixtures for the T20 World Cup before the Taliban took over Kabul on August 15, they could not disqualify the team at the last minute.

The Taliban also had a bone to pick with the ICC. They wanted the governing body to replace the Afghan flag with its own, plus they requested changes to the country's national anthem.

"They wanted players to sing the anthem without music," the cricket board official, who wished to remain anonymous, said.

The two sides eventually resolved their differences, allowing the Afghan team to participate in the championship.

"For the ICC, it was not an easy choice to disqualify the Afghan team at the last minute. They had to set their politics aside. They knew they would lose tens of thousands of TV viewers and hundreds of live spectators who love to watch world-famous Afghan cricketers like Rashid Khan, Mohammad Nabi and Mujeeb Zadran play," the board official added.

And for the Taliban, letting the team compete in the T20 world championship was in line with the group's attempts to legitimise their rule in the eyes of the world.

A few weeks before the World Cup games began, however, speculations were rife that the Taliban might ban the cricket team from playing in the oil-rich kingdom.

But those fears were allayed on October 6, when Qatar's foreign ministry granted permission, at the request of the Taliban’s interim government, for the Afghanistan team to take part in a training camp ahead of the World Cup. Afghans inside and outside their home country rejoiced.

The Afghan national team is now playing in Group 2 of the World Cup along with Pakistan, India, New Zealand, Scotland and Namibia. Its first win against Scotland on October 25 sparked massive celebrations in Afghanistan, which contrasted sharply with the general uncertainty in the country.

During the initial stage, the team showed promise, winning two games out of four, and in the process they proved to be a uniting factor in a deeply fragmented Afghan society. Taliban leaders, ex-government officials, and several politicians - including former presidents - congratulated the team. For a fleeting moment, the countrywide celebrations blurred the lines of ideological divisions.

This is even more impressive considering professional cricket in Afghanistan is a relatively recent phenomenon. It emerged mainly in the refugee camps in Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa during the mid-1990s. In the last two decades cricket has seen major progress, and today it is the most popular sport in the country.

Afghanistan's first win against Scotland on October 25 sparked massive celebrations in Afghanistan, which contrasted sharply with the general uncertainty in the country.
Afghanistan's first win against Scotland on October 25 sparked massive celebrations in Afghanistan, which contrasted sharply with the general uncertainty in the country. (AP)
Sports minus women

It wasn't always an easy road. During Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001, men’s sport was strictly controlled in Afghanistan, while women were barred entirely from playing any sport. In addition, the Taliban asked sportsmen to wear “appropriate” clothes and prohibited games during prayer times.

Today, though, the Taliban says things are different. The group’s current head of the National Olympic Committee, Nazar Mohammad Mutmaeen, told TRT World that no sports are currently banned in Afghanistan.

“Currently, there are 52 athletic federations under the Olympic Committee in the country that consist of different sports. Not even a single sport is banned. All federations are active and running.”

Mutmaeen emphasized that various sports played during the past 20 years will be played under Taliban rule — minus women.

“We respect the International Olympic Committee’s rules and regulations and we are ready to work with them.”

Then there was the issue of international conflict. Before cricket became a popular game throughout Afghanistan, it was treated more like a Pakistani sport.

“After I came to Afghanistan (from Pakistan) in 2001, a lot of people in Kabul didn’t know much about cricket. People thought it was a Pakistani game,” former Afghan cricketer Raees Ahmadzai told TRT World. Ahmadzai is currently the head coach of Afghanistan’s Under-19 cricket team.

This perception was changed after Afghanistan’s cricket team earned international achievements. “Cricket then became the number one most popular sport,” Ahmadzai added.

Interestingly, it was during the Taliban’s first rule in Afghanistan that the national cricket team traveled to Pakistan in its first ever foreign trip. The event paved the way for the Afghanistan Cricket Federation (currently Afghanistan Cricket Board) to then engage with the Asian Cricket Council.

Established in 1995 by Afghan players, the Afghanistan Cricket Federation was recognized under the Taliban’s Olympic Committee. However, the recognition was initially rejected as officials in the Olympic Committee considered cricket a Pakistani game.

At the time, the Taliban government did not have a budget for sports. As a result, the Afghan cricket players and leadership sought funds from various embassies and merchants. It was thus ordinary people who played a more significant role in promoting the game than previous Afghan governments.

“In the beginning, we didn’t have the government’s support, and there were no grounds and sports academies in the country,” the former national cricket player Ahmadzai explained.

“It was more of the efforts of cricket players and the Cricket Federation leadership at that time that helped Afghanistan’s cricket grow.”

Then there's the thorny issue of women and the Taliban. The nation's membership in the International Olympic Committee was suspended in 1999 because it didn’t include any women's sports. This was due to the Taliban’s overall ban on women in athletics. Afghanistan was subsequently banned from the 2000 Summer Games in Sydney.

Today the Taliban stresses its commitment to national cricket. A senior Taliban member, Anas Haqqani, was among the first to travel to Kabul from Doha, Qatar, after the Taliban took control of the capital. During his first meetings in Kabul, he met with Afghanistan’s national cricket players and provided them assurance about security and continued support.

Raees Ahmadzai, the former cricketer, says they have not encountered any problems after the fall of the former government. “They (the Taliban) have provided reassurance to cricket players. So there is no problem yet.”

“During the new government, our Under-19 cricket team travelled to Bangladesh and won the match,” he said.

Ahmadzai also mentioned that the Cricket Board, Afghanistan’s official governing body of cricket, has not received any communication that implies the Taliban’s interference in cricket.

Naseeb Khan Zadran, the Cricket Board CEO, told TRT World that the Taliban’s government has provided necessary support to the country’s team.

The national cricket team would have missed the T20 World Cup if the new government did not facilitate their travel to Qatar, says Zadran.

The board’s Media Manager, Abdullah Khan Paktani, said the Taliban’s government had supported the board in implementing the International Cricket Council’s requirement for participation at the World Cup championship. “The Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan has so far respected the principle of separating sports from politics,” he said.

The Under-19 cricket team head coach stated that the cricket players have made outstanding achievements in different categories and therefore, "cricket should be supported.”

“No one should have a problem with this sport,” he said. “It will be wise to pay more attention to the sport.”

https://www.trtworld.com/magazine/the-taliban-s-love-for-cricket-and-icc-s-dilemma-51381

Discrediting the game of cricket in perception of its link with being Pakistani has to be among the most ridiculous reasons for not playing a specific game.
 
Australia aren't going to take a stance against China even if the latter engage in official discimination. No need to pretend otherwise. Did their government censure the Saudis when women there were banned from driving a vehicle? Nope.
They did not want to host Afghanistan. Simples.

Australia did take a stance against China on the issue with Uighurs and they also took a stance against China on Covid investigations.

You fell flat on your face with that one son.
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Cricket serves not only as sport or an entertaining tool in Afghanistan, but serves as a source of inspiration & motivation for the younger generation of Afghanistan, and is used as a tool for ensuring unity and peace in the country. <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Cricket?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Cricket</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Love?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Love</a> <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/Hope?src=hash&ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">#Hope</a> <a href="https://t.co/bkhsBeIgXE">pic.twitter.com/bkhsBeIgXE</a></p>— Afghanistan Cricket Board (@ACBofficials) <a href="https://twitter.com/ACBofficials/status/1460930143388672002?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">November 17, 2021</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Mirwais Ashraf, the newly appointed chairman of the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB), said Afghan female cricketers can continue playing the game, ACB said.

In an introductory meeting with ACB departmental managers, Ashraf said women's cricket is one of the major requirements of the International Cricket Council (ICC) and they are committed to obtaining it.

“Our girls will be playing cricket on a normal basis and we are looking to provide for their basic needs and all the facilities they need,” he said. He said that the ICC requirements are valued by the ACB.

Recent shifts in the ACB’s leadership faced criticism from the ICC and the body said it has formed a group to assess the status of cricket in Afghanistan.

Ashraf said they will work to solve the problem. “Every employee must stay committed to the ACB and must strive hard to do well in their own areas,” he said.

https://tolonews.com/sport-175603
 
The ICC on Sunday said the Afghanistan government supports the world body’s constitution and has “in principle” agreed to resuming women’s cricket in the country.

Afghanistan cricket, especially the women’s game, had plunged into uncertainty last year due to the drastic changes in the political landscape following the takeover of the country by the Taliban.

There were reports that Afghan women, including the country’s women’s cricket team, were banned from playing sport under the Taliban administration.

The ICC had then set up a Working Group to review the status of cricket in the country.

The Board received an update from the Afghanistan Working Group detailing a recent meeting with a representative of the Afghanistan government and the Afghanistan Cricket Board in Doha.

The government official reiterated their commitment to fully respect and comply with the ICC constitution, in particular the need for diversity and inclusivity and for the ACB to operate independent from government interference, the ICC said.

“The meeting was positive and respectful and the government representative was clear in his support for the ICC constitution including in principle for women’s cricket in Afghanistan,” Working Group Chair Imran Khwaja said.

“There are obviously challenges for it to resume but we will continue to work with the ACB to take this forward.

“The Working Group will closely monitor the commitment undertaken by the Afghanistan government and will continue to report back to the ICC Board.” It is an ICC requirement for full members to also have a national women’s team, besides the men’s side.

Afghanistan is one of the full members of the ICC. The Afghanistan’s men team took part in the 2021 and 2022 T20 World Cup.

The Working Group also includes Ross McCollum (Ireland chair), Ramiz Raja (Pakistan chair) and Lawson Naidoo (SA chair).

https://sportstar.thehindu.com/cric...ple-resume-womens-cricket/article66131313.ece
 
Cricket chiefs have "significantly" raised the Afghanistan Cricket Board's (ACB) budget but provided no update on the women's team.

The ACB said the International Cricket Council (ICC) will give "technical assistance" and "capacity-building opportunities" to the body.

The women's team say there has been no contact from the ICC since they fled to Australia after the Taliban's takeover.

ACB chair Mirwais Ashraf called it a "good meeting for Afghanistan".

"We will receive a significantly greater budget compared to today," he said.

A new course to develop Afghan coaches will also be started while the ACB says the ICC will work with its staff to help it become "technically self-sufficient".

Earlier this month, the Afghanistan women's cricket team said they were hopeful the board meeting would result in a positive decision on their future.

The ICC was expected to discuss the international status of Afghanistan, who should have a women's set up in place as a full member nation, at a meeting on Monday.

After taking power, the Taliban has banned women from universities, parks and sports and raided the homes of female athletes.

The Afghanistan team want the ICC to take action to enable them to represent their country from Australia and wrote to the global governing body in December, only for the ICC to say it is an issue for the ACB.

Speaking to the BBC Stumped Podcast, Afghanistan player Firooza Afghan said: "For the first time it's possible they will make a fair decision for us because it's our right to play for our country.

"It doesn't matter where we live, the important thing is that we are still fighting to have a team here.

"Cricket is very important to me. I grew up with it and I hope one day I can play for Afghanistan."

BBC
 
Eye opening piece on Afghan cricket.

==

The Taliban killed Farhan’s father because his family taught girls how to play cricket

A brilliant young Afghan cricketer whose father was presumably killed by the Taliban because of his family’s support for women’s sport has found a safe, yet temporary, haven in Sydney with the Western Suburbs District Cricket Club.

Farhan Zakhail, who turns 20 next month, is an all-rounder who played first class cricket in Afghanistan at age 14 and captained his national Under-19 World Cup team. He is the nephew of former Afghanistan Test player Javed Ahmadi who, along with his pregnant wife and four children, was airlifted to Sydney in October 2021 following the fall of Kabul.

Javed and his family were granted refugee status by the Morrison Government and Farhan is now seeking residency, having arrived in Sydney in September last year on a 408 Visa.

Their families fled Afghanistan for Pakistan after becoming targets of the Taliban because they coached and supported women’s cricket.

Farhan’s father, Abdul, the brother of Javed, is believed to have been killed by the Taliban.

Javed explained: “We all lived together in the one family home in Kunduz and I worked at the women’s cricket academy. But the Taliban do not like women playing cricket and they came after my family. We escaped to Pakistan and even though my brother Abdul was not a player, they hunted him down and we don’t think he is in this world any longer.”

In a letter of support for Farhan’s residency in Australia, John Coates, the International Olympic Committee’s first vice president and former AOC president, writes, “Neither Farhan nor Javed could possibly, safely, return to Afghanistan, especially with the hardening Taliban line towards anyone who would be sympathetic to the progress of women in their native land.”

David Gilbert, the former Australian Test player and former chief executive of Cricket NSW, has nominated Farhan’s application for residency.

Farhan, whose English has improved significantly with lessons, says, “I am very lucky to being welcomed into Australia and especially by the Wests cricket people. Everyone’s support for me and for Javed’s family has helped me feel peaceful.”

Photographed in the Pratten Park dressing rooms with a backdrop of former Wests cricket greats, he added, “I hope to repay Wests with a long career at club level and maybe NSW and Australia”.

“It will all depend on my residency being approved.”

Farhan’s visa enabled him to stay in Sydney throughout the 2022-23 summer, playing cricket for Western Suburbs but not working. It expires this week. However, following the lodgement of his residency application he can remain in Australia while it is assessed, a process which usually takes two years.

It has been submitted under the “global talent” provision which is open to those of prodigious skill, including musicians and artists.

Farhan captained the Afghan Under-19 World Cup team in South Africa in 2020 at age 16. He averaged 46, including scoring 91 not out against Australia.

His form over one season with Western Suburbs DCC has been promising. Cricket NSW CEO Lee Germon wrote in another letter of support of the residency application, “Mr Zakhail has scored a total of 478 runs, with a high score of 68, and bagging 19 wickets with the ball for best figures of 4-19”.

Letters of support have also been provided by Nick Hockley, CEO of Cricket Australia, who described Farhan as “a long-term asset to Australian cricket”. Greg Dyer, the chair of the Australian Cricketers Association, has also endorsed the residency application, as have current Afghani Test players Rashid Khan and Mujeeb ur Rahman.

Former Australian cricket captain Michael Clarke described Farhan’s statistics in first class cricket in Afghanistan as “impressive”, while also lauding his leadership skills. “My old club, Western Suburbs Sydney, has identified these talents and has been nurturing Farhan during what is a very stressful period for him,” Clarke said. “Wests believe that Farhan has the potential for NSW state selection as his career unfolds over the next decade.”

Rick Wayde, vice president of the Wests club, says: “With all the turmoil he has been through, including the pressure of having to leave Australia if his residency application is unsuccessful, we are nursing him along.

“He is currently living in Merrylands with his uncle’s family. A fifth child, Ali, was born in Sydney in December 2021. Javed is now self-employed as a courier and is a great role model for his nephew.

“They are all still worried about family stuck in Afghanistan.”

https://www.smh.com.au/sport/cricke...irls-how-to-play-cricket-20230410-p5czc9.html
 
Afghanistan women's cricket team: In limbo and in exile in Australia

Nahida Sapan, an all-rounder in Afghanistan women's cricket team, was at university in Kabul when the Taliban retook control of the country on 15 August 2021.

"My teacher said you all have to go to your homes. We all got up and I saw the Taliban on the way home. I was really, really scared," she tells the BBC.

Once she got home, Sapan grabbed her cricket kit and hid it in the basement. She was also the scorer for the team, so she went into the backyard and burned all her scorebooks.

Sapan, whose brother worked for the previous government, says her family then started receiving calls and messages from the Taliban.

"They were direct threats. They were saying: 'we will find you and if we find you, we will not let you live. If we find one of you we will find all of you,'" she says.

"I had a panic attack, my hands were shaking. I was so scared, I was traumatised. Every time I heard a knock at the door, all I could think was 'they've found us, they're going to kill us.'"

The people sending her threats are now serving in government, she says.

Over the coming months, Sapan and her family moved from house to house to avoid detection. Eventually she managed to escape over the border to Pakistan, before meeting up with the rest of her team in Australia.

They are now beyond the clutches of the Taliban, but Sapan and her team-mates are still waiting, their careers resting on the whims of others.

Afghanistan's first national women's team was formed in 2010, nine years after the Taliban fell in the face of a US-led military coalition.

In the early years the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) prevented the women's team from playing at several international tournaments, saying it received "Taliban threats".

But as the profile of the men's team grew, the ACB had to start taking the women's game more seriously. The International Cricket Council (ICC) requires its 12 full members - Afghanistan became one in 2017 - to have a national women's team. This led to 25 female cricketers being awarded contracts in November 2020.

The Taliban's return to power less than a year later destroyed the dreams of women across Afghanistan, including its cricketers. The Taliban has banned women from universities, parks and sports and raided the homes of female athletes.

Sapan, 20, is one of more than 20 members of the Afghan women's cricket team now living in Australia after fleeing Afghanistan.

Another who escaped was 17-year-old bowler Aysha Yousofzai.

She recalls her terrifying journey through Taliban checkpoints as she made her way to Pakistan.

"We had our faces covered because we weren't allowed to show our faces to men, so they didn't know who we were. We were scared but thankfully they didn't say we had to show our faces," she says.

Yousofzai managed to make it to Pakistan, and the Australian government arranged a flight for her and other members of the squad to come to Australia. But some of her friends and family weren't as lucky.

"Nobody is doing good now in Afghanistan, especially women. They don't have the right to study, work, or travel without a man," she says.

Yousofzai and Sapan have settled into life in Australia. They are both studying and are appreciative of the freedoms they have in comparison with women back in Afghanistan.

"Living in Australia actually feels like living. When we were in Afghanistan it was like we were just existing," Sapan says. "Now I feel hope for my future, I feel hope for tomorrow, I feel hope that I can make my dreams come true."

But while they are thankful to the Australian government, they have been left feeling let down by cricket's global governing body, the ICC.

Members of the Afghanistan women's team say they have still had no contact from the ICC, despite it setting up the Afghanistan Working Group in 2021 to "review the status of the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) and cricket in Afghanistan". The women's team wrote to the ICC in December but the body said their status is an issue for the ACB.

"They didn't let any of our team know about the decisions they are making about our future," Sapan says. "They went to Dubai twice to talk about us but we didn't even know, we just heard through the internet. Nobody has contacted us to ask how we feel, or what we want."

As a full member of the ICC, Afghanistan should have a women's side in place.

The Afghan women's team has requested that the ICC recognises them as the official women's team in Australia, and for some of the funds allocated to the ACB be redirected to them.

But in March, the ICC "significantly" raised the ACB's budget without providing any update on the women's team.

The lack of support means the women cannot regularly train together and have been unable to arrange any official matches.

"I do not want the ICC to forget us or forget the girls in Afghanistan that still have hope of playing cricket. There are a lot of girls in Afghanistan who dream of becoming cricket players," Sapan says.

Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at campaign group Human Rights Watch, said the ICC needs to recognise the women's national team in Australia, but also press for women to be able to play in Afghanistan.

If the ACB fails to comply, Worden says Afghanistan should be suspended by the ICC, which would mean the men's team would also be unable to play.

"Rules are rules. That's what sport is about," Worden says.

"Let's say if New Zealand all of a sudden said we're only sending our male team to compete in international competitions, the ICC would and should have something to say about that.

"Why is there an ugly double standard on Afghanistan?"

The Taliban has openly supported men's cricket, knowing how widely loved the game is by Afghans. Worden believes that the threat of the men being suspended from the international game could act as a "pressure point" on the Taliban to lift restrictions on women playing sport.

"Right now it's cost free for the Taliban to ban Afghan women players from sport," she said.

Both Yousofzai and Sapan say they do not want to see the men's team affected.

A spokesman for the ICC said it "remains committed to supporting the Afghanistan Cricket Board and are not penalising the ACB, or their players for abiding by the laws set by the government of their country".

"The relationship with players in any of the ICC's Member countries is managed by the Board in that country, the ICC does not get involved. Similarly, the authority to field men's and women's national teams lies solely with the Member Board in any country, not with the ICC.

"The ICC will continue to constructively use its influence to assist the ACB in developing cricket and playing opportunities for both men and women in Afghanistan."

The ACB did not respond to a request for comment.

An Afghanistan Cricket Board XI dance on the outfield after a match
The Afghanistan Cricket Board awarded contracts to 25 female players in November 2020, less than a year before the Taliban returned to power
Sapan and Yousofzai both dream of one day returning to their homeland.

"I would love to be in Afghanistan and play for Afghanistan because that's where I was born, that's where I feel I belong," Yousofzai says. "If there is freedom of speech, gender equality, the opportunities I have in Australia … I'd love to be there. But if there is not, then no."

Both women want to one day become psychologists, and to be active in promoting gender equality in Afghanistan and Australia.

But right now they simply want to be able to play the game they love.

"I want my team back because I worked really hard. I faced many challenges to achieve my dream to be part of the national team … but now I can't play under the name of Afghanistan," Yousofzai says.

"I just want my rights and to be treated as a human. I just want them to treat me like they treat male players in Afghanistan."

BBC
 
Afghanistan women's cricket team: In limbo and in exile in Australia

Nahida Sapan, an all-rounder in Afghanistan women's cricket team, was at university in Kabul when the Taliban retook control of the country on 15 August 2021.

"My teacher said you all have to go to your homes. We all got up and I saw the Taliban on the way home. I was really, really scared," she tells the BBC.

Once she got home, Sapan grabbed her cricket kit and hid it in the basement. She was also the scorer for the team, so she went into the backyard and burned all her scorebooks.

Sapan, whose brother worked for the previous government, says her family then started receiving calls and messages from the Taliban.

"They were direct threats. They were saying: 'we will find you and if we find you, we will not let you live. If we find one of you we will find all of you,'" she says.

"I had a panic attack, my hands were shaking. I was so scared, I was traumatised. Every time I heard a knock at the door, all I could think was 'they've found us, they're going to kill us.'"

The people sending her threats are now serving in government, she says.

Over the coming months, Sapan and her family moved from house to house to avoid detection. Eventually she managed to escape over the border to Pakistan, before meeting up with the rest of her team in Australia.

They are now beyond the clutches of the Taliban, but Sapan and her team-mates are still waiting, their careers resting on the whims of others.

Afghanistan's first national women's team was formed in 2010, nine years after the Taliban fell in the face of a US-led military coalition.

In the early years the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) prevented the women's team from playing at several international tournaments, saying it received "Taliban threats".

But as the profile of the men's team grew, the ACB had to start taking the women's game more seriously. The International Cricket Council (ICC) requires its 12 full members - Afghanistan became one in 2017 - to have a national women's team. This led to 25 female cricketers being awarded contracts in November 2020.

The Taliban's return to power less than a year later destroyed the dreams of women across Afghanistan, including its cricketers. The Taliban has banned women from universities, parks and sports and raided the homes of female athletes.

Sapan, 20, is one of more than 20 members of the Afghan women's cricket team now living in Australia after fleeing Afghanistan.

Another who escaped was 17-year-old bowler Aysha Yousofzai.

She recalls her terrifying journey through Taliban checkpoints as she made her way to Pakistan.

"We had our faces covered because we weren't allowed to show our faces to men, so they didn't know who we were. We were scared but thankfully they didn't say we had to show our faces," she says.

Yousofzai managed to make it to Pakistan, and the Australian government arranged a flight for her and other members of the squad to come to Australia. But some of her friends and family weren't as lucky.

"Nobody is doing good now in Afghanistan, especially women. They don't have the right to study, work, or travel without a man," she says.

Yousofzai and Sapan have settled into life in Australia. They are both studying and are appreciative of the freedoms they have in comparison with women back in Afghanistan.

"Living in Australia actually feels like living. When we were in Afghanistan it was like we were just existing," Sapan says. "Now I feel hope for my future, I feel hope for tomorrow, I feel hope that I can make my dreams come true."

But while they are thankful to the Australian government, they have been left feeling let down by cricket's global governing body, the ICC.

Members of the Afghanistan women's team say they have still had no contact from the ICC, despite it setting up the Afghanistan Working Group in 2021 to "review the status of the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) and cricket in Afghanistan". The women's team wrote to the ICC in December but the body said their status is an issue for the ACB.

"They didn't let any of our team know about the decisions they are making about our future," Sapan says. "They went to Dubai twice to talk about us but we didn't even know, we just heard through the internet. Nobody has contacted us to ask how we feel, or what we want."

As a full member of the ICC, Afghanistan should have a women's side in place.

The Afghan women's team has requested that the ICC recognises them as the official women's team in Australia, and for some of the funds allocated to the ACB be redirected to them.

But in March, the ICC "significantly" raised the ACB's budget without providing any update on the women's team.

The lack of support means the women cannot regularly train together and have been unable to arrange any official matches.

"I do not want the ICC to forget us or forget the girls in Afghanistan that still have hope of playing cricket. There are a lot of girls in Afghanistan who dream of becoming cricket players," Sapan says.

Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at campaign group Human Rights Watch, said the ICC needs to recognise the women's national team in Australia, but also press for women to be able to play in Afghanistan.

If the ACB fails to comply, Worden says Afghanistan should be suspended by the ICC, which would mean the men's team would also be unable to play.

"Rules are rules. That's what sport is about," Worden says.

"Let's say if New Zealand all of a sudden said we're only sending our male team to compete in international competitions, the ICC would and should have something to say about that.

"Why is there an ugly double standard on Afghanistan?"

The Taliban has openly supported men's cricket, knowing how widely loved the game is by Afghans. Worden believes that the threat of the men being suspended from the international game could act as a "pressure point" on the Taliban to lift restrictions on women playing sport.

"Right now it's cost free for the Taliban to ban Afghan women players from sport," she said.

Both Yousofzai and Sapan say they do not want to see the men's team affected.

A spokesman for the ICC said it "remains committed to supporting the Afghanistan Cricket Board and are not penalising the ACB, or their players for abiding by the laws set by the government of their country".

"The relationship with players in any of the ICC's Member countries is managed by the Board in that country, the ICC does not get involved. Similarly, the authority to field men's and women's national teams lies solely with the Member Board in any country, not with the ICC.

"The ICC will continue to constructively use its influence to assist the ACB in developing cricket and playing opportunities for both men and women in Afghanistan."

The ACB did not respond to a request for comment.

An Afghanistan Cricket Board XI dance on the outfield after a match
The Afghanistan Cricket Board awarded contracts to 25 female players in November 2020, less than a year before the Taliban returned to power
Sapan and Yousofzai both dream of one day returning to their homeland.

"I would love to be in Afghanistan and play for Afghanistan because that's where I was born, that's where I feel I belong," Yousofzai says. "If there is freedom of speech, gender equality, the opportunities I have in Australia … I'd love to be there. But if there is not, then no."

Both women want to one day become psychologists, and to be active in promoting gender equality in Afghanistan and Australia.

But right now they simply want to be able to play the game they love.

"I want my team back because I worked really hard. I faced many challenges to achieve my dream to be part of the national team … but now I can't play under the name of Afghanistan," Yousofzai says.

"I just want my rights and to be treated as a human. I just want them to treat me like they treat male players in Afghanistan."

BBC

Where are those Timepass posters that were defending the taliban take over in Afghanistan.
Surely they should read this
 
Refugee b-girl disqualified for message at Olympics

Refugee athlete Manizha Talash was disqualified for displaying the words "free Afghan women" on her outfit during her Olympic breaking battle in Paris.

The Afghan, who was competing for the Refugee Olympic Team as B-girl Talash, had the message emblazoned in large letters on a cape she wore in her pre-qualifying battle against India of the Netherlands as the dance sport made its Games debut.

Talash lost but was later also disqualified because political statements and slogans are banned on the field of play at the Olympics.

"I wanted to show people what is possible," she told reporters.

Talash, originally from Kabul, lives in Spain and is one of 37 athletes competing for the refugee team.

She fled Afghanistan after the Taliban returned to power in 2021 and effectively banned music and dancing, and barred females from classrooms and gyms.

The Taliban say they respect women's rights in line with Sharia law.

Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter states "no kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas".

It says if there is a breach, each incident will be evaluated by their respective National Olympic Committee, International Federation and the International Olympic Committee, and disciplinary action will be taken on a case-by-case basis as necessary.

Talash was eliminated from the competition before the round-robin stage but her message will have been seen on the biggest stage her sport has ever been on.

The Olympics' newest sport will not be at Los Angeles 2028 although it will be hoping to show enough potential to be considered for Brisbane 2032.

BBC
 
Refugee b-girl disqualified for message at Olympics

Refugee athlete Manizha Talash was disqualified for displaying the words "free Afghan women" on her outfit during her Olympic breaking battle in Paris.

The Afghan, who was competing for the Refugee Olympic Team as B-girl Talash, had the message emblazoned in large letters on a cape she wore in her pre-qualifying battle against India of the Netherlands as the dance sport made its Games debut.

Talash lost but was later also disqualified because political statements and slogans are banned on the field of play at the Olympics.

"I wanted to show people what is possible," she told reporters.

Talash, originally from Kabul, lives in Spain and is one of 37 athletes competing for the refugee team.

She fled Afghanistan after the Taliban returned to power in 2021 and effectively banned music and dancing, and barred females from classrooms and gyms.

The Taliban say they respect women's rights in line with Sharia law.

Rule 50 of the Olympic Charter states "no kind of demonstration or political, religious or racial propaganda is permitted in any Olympic sites, venues or other areas".

It says if there is a breach, each incident will be evaluated by their respective National Olympic Committee, International Federation and the International Olympic Committee, and disciplinary action will be taken on a case-by-case basis as necessary.

Talash was eliminated from the competition before the round-robin stage but her message will have been seen on the biggest stage her sport has ever been on.

The Olympics' newest sport will not be at Los Angeles 2028 although it will be hoping to show enough potential to be considered for Brisbane 2032.

BBC
Funny how this leads to disqualification but what the italian boxer did with imane was considered alright. They should atleast ban that italian boxer from olympics
 
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