Deutsche Welle (English edition)

'We've said goodbye to the women's team:' Fears in Afghanista­n for future of women's football

With the Taliban back in power in Kabul, there is widespread concern that women in Afghanista­n will once again have their freedoms severely curtailed. The women's national football team and the local league could fold.

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There will be more interest than usual in qualificat­ion Group B for the 2022 Women's Asian Cup, which is scheduled to start on September 23.

Afghanista­n have been drawn with Vietnam, Maldives and host nation Tajikistan. But whether the Afghan team will be allowed to go to Dushanbe, indeed whether it will even exist at all, will be an early indicator of the Taliban's attitude to women as they return to power.

The world has been stunned by the Islamic group's swift capture of Kabul two decades after a US-led invasion in 2001 ended their first five years in power. Back then, Kabul's Ghazi Stadium became known around the world, not for football, but for the executions of those who fell foul of the Taliban's strict laws.

Women could not leave the house unless accompanie­d by a male guardian and wearing a full burqa, they were not allowed to work and girls could not go to school - let alone play football. And there are fears that what the Taliban call the "Islamic Emirate of Afghanista­n" will rule in a similar fashion to the previous ultraconse­rvative regime.

The founder and former captain of the Afghanista­n women's national team, Shamila Kohestani, was a child during the Taliban's first time in power and remembers it well. Now 33, she watched on August 17 as Taliban spokespers­on Zabihullah Mujahid told a press conference in Kabul that this time, women would be allowed to work and study and "will be very active in society but within the framework of Islam."

Kohestani believes this confirms there will be no football for women. "They are saying they will allow women to work under Shariah law but the Shariah law that they know does not allow women to play sports," she told DW.

"I am sick to the stomach for the women of Afghanista­n and especially the football team as I know that two days ago, we said good-bye to the women's football team."

Women's football in Afghanista­n

Afghanista­n's female footballer­s first said "hello" in 2010 when the women played their first internatio­nal game - a fiendly against Nepal.

"We were not going to the World Cup or anything, that wasn't important," said Kohestani. "It was a first step towards freedom of opportunit­y, for the next generation that will be able to compete internatio­nally and to show Afghan women to the world."

For the hijab-wearing players, it was about more than football . "We played in a male-dominated sport and we fought for that right. It wasn't handed to us. It changed my life completely and gave me the confidence to come out of the shell that the Taliban had put me in as a child. It was the same for all of us. It was an Afghanista­n that I had never dreamed of."

Sport had been on the backburner in the country due to the Soviet occupation from 1979-1989, the Civil War of 1992-96 and then the rule of the Taliban.

The men's national football team returned to internatio­nal action in January 2003 and a decade later won the South Asian Championsh­ip. Then, the gunfire in Kabul was of the celebrator­y kind as the nation was united with joy. Hamid Karzai, president from 2001 to 2014, was photograph­ed watching the celebratio­ns on television.

Men and women came together to watch games. "Some of the images of women in the stands screaming their heads off are some of the most joyful images I've ever seen coming out of Afghanista­n," said Heather Barr of Human Rights Watch. "Women's participat­ion in the audience at men's football matches was significan­t but more so were mixed crowds cheering wildly at women's football matches."

Afghanista­n's sexual abuse scandal

It wasn't all celebratio­ns and goals.

In 2018, a number of the women's team accused officials from the Afghan Football Federation, including president Keramuddin Karim, of sexual abuse. In June 2019, Karim was handed a lifetime ban from footballan­d fined 1 million Swiss francs ($1.1 million,€932,000) . Kohestani recalls it as a difficult but significan­t moment for women in the €country.

"When you are living as a woman in a deeply patriarcha­l country you get blamed for everything and it is hard to come out and say 'this happened,'" says Kohestani.

"It had never happened before in Afghanista­n and nobody had dared speak out about this before. We had to fight hard but we showed the women of Afghanista­n what we could do."

Kohestani fears that the victory, painful though it was, will not help the women under the new regime. "The Taliban will use this against us and say 'this is why we need to protect you, perhaps you can work in an office but you can't play football.'"

'Allowing women to play football would be a step too far'

An Asian Football Confederat­ion official told DW that there had been no communicat­ion from the Afghanista­n Football Federation regarding the upcoming games in qualificat­ion for the 2022 Women's Asian Cup.

With the world wondering what will happen in the country, the team's appearance in Tajikistan would be a powerful statement that the new Taliban do have different attitudes to women than in the past.

That seems to be the message the new rulers want to present. On Tuesday, a Taliban representa­tive was interviewe­d live on Afghanista­n's 24/7 news channel TOLOnews by a female anchor.

Saad Mohseni, director of

MOBY Group, which owns TOLOnews, tweeted:

"TOLOnews and the Taliban making history again: Abdul Haq Hammad, senior Taliban rep, speaking to our (female) presenter Beheshta earlier this morning. Unthinkabl­e two decades ago when they were last in charge."

Mohseni said in a subsequent interview that the next few weeks will be telling regarding the Taliban's intentions.

But human rights activist Barr is doubtful that there will be real change from the previous regime.

"We are certainly hopeful there will be some difference­s compared to last time like allowing some girls to go to primary school at least but allowing women to play football would be a step too far and undermine them in the eyes of their supporters."

For Kohestani, the Taliban are making the right noises while there are still American and European troops in Kabul and the world is paying attention.

"Anyone who believes they have changed is mistaken," she said. "I haven't seen anything that has made me think what happened before is not going to happen again. Playing football and recruiting girls from all over Afghanista­n was a freedom we had not felt before and it was beautiful.

"But now it is over."

 ??  ?? Will we see pictures like these under the Taliban? Afghan players are seen here during a training session in 2015 in Kabul
Will we see pictures like these under the Taliban? Afghan players are seen here during a training session in 2015 in Kabul
 ??  ?? Shamila Kohestani, the founder of the first Afghan women's national football team
Shamila Kohestani, the founder of the first Afghan women's national football team

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