Afghan Women’s Refugee Cricketers Find New Hope in Australia’s Domestic Leagues

Afghan women's refugee cricketers play first match in Melbourne, aiming for international recognition despite challenges. [Image via Shutterstock]

MELBOURNE: More than three years after fleeing Afghanistan as the Taliban swept to power, a women’s team of refugee cricketers will play an exhibition match in Melbourne on Thursday, hoping it will be a first step on the path to full internationals.

Afghanistan is an established force in the men’s game, having reached the semi-finals of last year’s T20 World Cup co-hosted by the United States and West Indies. But women’s sport has been disbanded in the country since the Taliban takeover in August, 2021.

The Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) had 25 contracted women players in 2020 but most now live in Australia in exile, with others settled in Canada and Britain.

Developing women’s cricket in Afghanistan was no picnic before the Taliban, with miniscule funding, security concerns and conservative attitudes holding back its development.

But there were green shoots as girls’ teams and tournaments sprung up in the provinces in the wake of the men’s rise on the international stage.

The ACB made plans for the contracted women’s players to head to the Middle East for their first international tour.

Kabul native Tuba Sangar, a former ACB staffer developing the women’s programme, remembers the players showing off their new cricket bats and kits.

“It was an amazing moment for all of us,” she told Reuters on Wednesday.

“Playing cricket in Afghanistan was not easy. But there really was a lot of hope that we could develop and compete internationally.”

Months later, the players were dumping their cricket gear in a panic as the Taliban stormed Kabul.

One teenage player, Feroza Afghan, burned her kit and spent three months travelling overland with family members before crossing into Pakistan, having to negotiate more than a dozen internal checkpoints.

Sangar also left in a hurry with other female staff working at the ACB. She resettled in Canada via Kuwait and is now a community support worker for a non-profit in Ontario province.

Also See: Afghan Women Deserve Better

Australia played a big role in helping the women’s refugee cricketers evacuate along with football players and other athletes.

The government issued humanitarian visas and arranged for them to board planes out of Kabul.

The sport’s national federation Cricket Australia has facilitated Thursday’s match at the Junction Oval in Melbourne which has the Afghanistan XI playing a team arranged by Cricket Without Borders, a non-profit supporting the women’s game.

Captained by Nahida Sapan, it will be the first time the Afghan women have competed as a team since leaving the nation.

Though cricket’s global governing body, the International Cricket Council, recognises Afghanistan as a full member and funds its cricket board, the exiled women remain unfunded.

The Australia-based cricketers play for local clubs.

Cricket Australia (CA) boss Nick Hockley said this week he hopes the Afghan women can play more games as a team and eventually represent the country on the international stage.

CA will not schedule international matches against the men’s team, though, on moral grounds, citing “deteriorating human rights” for women and girls in Afghanistan.

The policy has drawn accusations of hypocrisy given Australia will play Afghanistan at World Cups and other major global tournaments when prestigious trophies are at stake.

CA’s stance also leaves Sangar cold.

“I believe that cricket should not suffer for politics,” she said.

“I don’t believe that’s the right decision.

“If you ask any Afghanistan woman how they got into cricket, they will say it was from watching the men and being inspired.”

This news is sourced from The Express Tribune and is intended for informational purposes only.

News Desk

Your trusted source for insightful journalism. Stay informed with our compelling coverage of global affairs, business, technology, and more.

Recent

When Insurgents Rule: The Taliban’s Crisis of Governance

When Insurgents Rule: The Taliban’s Crisis of Governance

The Taliban’s confrontation with Pakistan reveals a deeper failure at the heart of their rule: an insurgent movement incapable of governing the state it conquered. Bound by rigid ideology and fractured by internal rivalries, the Taliban have turned their military victory into a political and economic collapse, exposing the limits of ruling through insurgent logic.

Read More »
The Great Unknotting: America’s Tech Break with China, and the Return of the American System

The Great Unknotting: America’s Tech Break with China, and the Return of the American System

As the U.S. unwinds decades of technological interdependence with China, a new industrial and strategic order is emerging. Through selective decoupling, focused on chips, AI, and critical supply chains, Washington aims to restore domestic manufacturing, secure data sovereignty, and revive the Hamiltonian vision of national self-reliance. This is not isolationism but a recalibration of globalization on America’s terms.

Read More »
Inside the Istanbul Talks: How Taliban Factionalism Killed a Peace Deal

Inside the Istanbul Talks: How Taliban Factionalism Killed a Peace Deal

The collapse of the Turkiye-hosted talks to address the TTP threat was not a diplomatic failure but a calculated act of sabotage from within the Taliban regime. Deep factional divides—between Kandahar, Kabul, and Khost blocs—turned mediation into chaos, as Kabul’s power players sought to use the TTP issue as leverage for U.S. re-engagement and financial relief. The episode exposed a regime too fractured and self-interested to act against terrorism or uphold sovereignty.

Read More »
The Indo-Afghan Arc: Rewriting Pakistan’s Strategic Geography

The Indo-Afghan Arc: Rewriting Pakistan’s Strategic Geography

The deepening India-Afghanistan engagement marks a new strategic era in South Asia. Beneath the façade of humanitarian cooperation lies a calculated effort to constrict Pakistan’s strategic space, from intelligence leverage and soft power projection to potential encirclement on both eastern and western fronts. Drawing from the insights of Iqbal and Khushhal Khan Khattak, this analysis argues that Pakistan must reclaim its strategic selfhood, strengthen regional diplomacy, and transform its western border from a vulnerability into a vision of regional connectivity and stability.

Read More »
Pakistan’s rejection of a Taliban proposal to include the TTP in Turkey talks reaffirmed its sovereignty and refusal to legitimize terrorism.

Legitimacy, Agency, and the Illusion of Mediation

The recent talks in Turkey, attended by Afghan representatives, exposed the delicate politics of legitimacy and agency in Pakistan-Afghanistan relations. By rejecting the Taliban’s proposal to include the TTP, Pakistan safeguarded its sovereignty and avoided legitimizing a militant group as a political actor, preserving its authority and strategic narrative.

Read More »