After more than three years of living in exile, the Afghanistan ... hours before the Women's Ashes day-night Test match at the Melbourne Cricket Ground. The players wore blue shirts that were ...
A few miles from the Melbourne Cricket Ground where Australia and England started the women ... blue shirts designed for the match with a logo featuring a cricket ball and a tulip, Afghanistan ...
"Actually, we have big hope from this match because this match can open doors for Afghan women for education, sport and the future." The players wore blue shirts designed for the match with a logo ...
a charity which aims to draw young women into the game. Clad in cricket pads, helmets and blue shirts of a similar shade to the national men's side, the Afghan XI gathered for a brief team prayer ...
FeatureDespite the intense repression faced by Afghan women since the Taliban regained power in 2021, many continue to fight in whatever way they can, drawing strength from the energy of despair.
Afghanistan's Taliban authorities ... from certain types of work. The few women who still appear on TV channels are covered except for their eyes. Many radio stations have ceased broadcasting ...
Afghanistan ... Women have been barred from secondary school and university as well as squeezed from certain types of work. The few women who still appear on TV channels are covered except for ...
I sat at the dining-room table, with a clear view of the sitting room. Madam Bedi settled herself on a white sofa, and the ...
Afghanistan's women cricketers on Thursday played their first game since fleeing the Taliban three years ago, a charity match ...