Women football players leave Afghanistan on evacuation flight

The Afghan team was created in 2007 in a country where women playing sport was seen as a political act of defiance against the Taliban.

Published : Aug 24, 2021 15:50 IST

“The last few days have been extremely stressful but today we have achieved an important victory,” former Afghanistan captain Khalida Popal said after players from women’s national football team were evacuated on a flight from Kabul.
“The last few days have been extremely stressful but today we have achieved an important victory,” former Afghanistan captain Khalida Popal said after players from women’s national football team were evacuated on a flight from Kabul.
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“The last few days have been extremely stressful but today we have achieved an important victory,” former Afghanistan captain Khalida Popal said after players from women’s national football team were evacuated on a flight from Kabul.

Players from Afghanistan women’s national football team had an “important victory” on Tuesday when they were among a group of more than 75 people evacuated on a flight from Kabul.

Global football players’ union FIFPRO thanked the Australian government for making the evacuation of players, team officials and family members possible, with work continuing to help more leave Afghanistan.

“These young women, both as athletes and activists, have been in a position of danger and on behalf of their peers around the world we thank the international community for coming to their aid,” the union said in a statement.

 

The Afghan team was created in 2007 in a country where women playing sport was seen as a political act of defiance against the Taliban.

Players had been advised this month to delete social media posts and photographs of them with the team to help avoid reprisals since the United States-backed Afghanistan government fell.

“The last few days have been extremely stressful but today we have achieved an important victory,” former team captain Khalida Popal said.

 

Popal is among a team of FIFPRO lawyers and advisors who have worked with authorities in six countries, including Australia, the U.S. and the United Kingdom, to get athletes and their families on to evacuation lists and flights to safety.

“The women footballers have been brave and strong in a moment of crisis, and we hope they will have a better life outside Afghanistan,” Popal said.

FIFPRO general secretary Jonas Baer-Hoffmann said evacuations had been “an incredibly complex process.”

“Our hearts go out to all the others who remain stranded in the country against their will,” he said.

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