Boycotting Afghanistan cricket “will destroy people’s hope”
Former Afghanistan women’s development manager Tuba Sangar discusses how other nations boycotting the national cricket team would destroy people’s hope during uncertain times.
Former Afghanistan women’s development manager Tuba Sangar says boycotting the national cricket team would “destroy people’s hope“ during uncertain times.
In a wide-ranging interview with Stumped presenter Alison Mitchell, Sangar, who has fled the country, admitted there’s currently “no hope” for women's cricket in the country.
Cricket has become the national game of Afghanistan due to the extraordinary rise of the men's team over the last decade.
A requirement of Afghanistan’s Test status, awarded to them by the International Cricket Council in 2014, is supporting a women’s team.
A Taliban representative last week told the media that he did not think women would be allowed to play cricket but since then Dr Hamid Shinwari, the CEO of the Afghanistan Cricket Board has said it's doing all it can to "grow cricket in the traditional cultural, religious and changing political environments of the culture."
Photo: Members of Afghanistan's first national women's cricket team take part in a training session in Kabul. (Credit: SHAH MARAI/AFP via Getty Images)