Afghan women have few rights under Taliban rule, but does sanctioning the men's cricket team help them?

Unlike in apartheid South Africa, sanctions will very likely do little for the cause of Afghan women

Andrew Fidel Fernando20-Feb-2025In Afghanistan, women are being erased by design. They have been cast out of schools, out of universities, medical colleges, public places of work, and sports fields.That the Taliban, which took Kabul in August 2021, is as brutally repressive a government as exists at present is well known. And yet so many edicts issued by the Taliban’s “Propagation of Virtue and Prevention of Vice Ministry” feel like fresh calamities for the rights and well-being of resident Afghan women. Laws active since the middle of last year prescribe that “whenever an adult woman leaves her home out of necessity, she is obliged to conceal her voice, face, and body”. When education is denied, when women cannot be visible in public, when so much as raising your voice outdoors is unlawful, do even stray animals have greater agency?It is against this horrifying political backdrop that cricket is about to host another major tournament in which the Afghanistan men’s team will compete. This is awkward for a sport that purports to enshrine gender equality, but which does not wish to abandon one of its shiniest 21st century success stories. On the one hand, the ICC has its stated goal of growing the women’s game. On the other, Afghanistan’s men are almost certainly the greatest ever cricket side from a nation not formerly colonised by the British. One of the great critiques of cricket is that it is inaccessible for people who were not introduced to it early. Here was evidence of it exploding into popularity in a place that had been largely oblivious to it as recently as two generations ago.Related

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It follows that the status quo is beset by pretense. Before each match at an ICC event, Afghanistan’s male players line up before the tricolour flag of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan, which was overthrown in 2021, and show respect to a now-defunct national anthem while at home music is banned in public, and instruments are burned for causing “moral corruption”.Meanwhile, the latest from the ICC is that it remains “committed to leveraging [its] influence constructively to support the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB), in fostering cricket development and ensuring playing opportunities for both men and women in Afghanistan”, according to a Reuters report. In truth, there currently exists no realistic pathway to setting down the most rudimentary cricket programme for women. Even in the days of the Islamic Republic of Afghanistan (under the Taliban it is called the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan) such programmes were shackled, largely by custom and culture. Any advances made back then have since been emphatically reversed. What is the liberty to play sport when set against foundational rights such as the right to freedom of speech, the right to movement, and the right to education? What real “influence” does the ICC believe it can wield upon a totalitarian state?Knitted into the ICC’s contradictions on this issue is the further pretense that it is an apolitical organisation – one that does not even allow international cricketers to wear emblems showing solidarity with peoples whom those players believe to be oppressed. Usman Khawaja and Moeen Ali have found this out in the past 12 years, over their support of Palestinians. In reality, pursuing a professional career in cricket as a woman is an intensely political act in too much of the cricketing world, far beyond Afghanistan. Parents, teachers, clerics, community leaders, and often politicians themselves, frequently impose restrictions on girls taking to sport.