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'Slap in the face to the regime': Exiled female footballers finally have reason to celebrate

After a five-year battle for FIFA recognition, refugee members of the Afghan women's football team can represent their team internationally.

In the foreground, a woman wearing a green jersey embraces a woman wearing a red jersey. In the background, a group opf sports players wearing red jerseys huddle.

Fatima of the Melbourne Victory Afghan Women's Team and Khalida Popal, Afghan Women’s Team Director and former Afghanistan National Team Captain embrace during The Hope Cup in Melbourne, Australia. Source: Getty, AAP / Kelly Defina/Jalal Morchidi

FIFA has announced sweeping governance reforms that will allow members of the Afghan women's team to represent their country on the international field.

Afghanistan's women's national team has not played an official competitive international since before the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

The Taliban authorities have imposed sweeping ⁠restrictions on women and girls, including restrictions affecting education, work and sport, forcing many female athletes to flee the country or abandon competition.

Dispersed across the world, several members of the Afghan National team settled in Melbourne.

Mursal Sadat, co-founder of Afghanistan United and member of the Afghan women's team, has campaigned for this moment for almost half a decade. She said her advocacy had been about much more than the game.

"Obviously, in Afghanistan, women cannot study, let alone play sports. It was about more than just playing; it was about representation, about being the voice of the voiceless," Sadat told SBS News.

The players mounted a challenge to play in the 2023 Women's World Cup and again in the Asian Cup, but both bids failed.

The timing of FIFA's reforms, though welcome, are somewhat awkward — the team will also miss out on the 2027 Women's World Cup in Brazil. However, there is still time to compete for qualification at the 2028 Olympics in Los Angeles.

"Some of the challenges, when we saw the women's World Cup in Australia, and we weren't allowed to compete, I personally cried a lot. Having a tour of the locker room and being there was very painful," Sadat said.

In 2025 FIFA launched the Afghan Women's Refugee Team, made up of diaspora members of the former Afghan national team.

Sadat said the moment was amazing.

"It was a milestone, it was a highlight of the journey," she said.

"We believed that this is just the beginning, and it will happen. People always say FIFA is home to all football players around the world, how can the doors be closed to one member of the family?"

For Sadat and her team, their focus was on getting back into the game, playing official games and ranking once again.

"I'll let the future decide, and I'm hoping to see a better outcome for women," she said.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino said the organisation aimed to enable the Afgan players, as well as other FIFA member associations unable to register a national or representative team, to make the next step.

“We are proud of the beautiful journey initiated by Afghan Women United," he said in a statement.

Sadat said the moment was more than just a win for her team, but justice in the face of the Taliban regime.

"And it's not just so significant, it's a slap in the face to the regime, who make women suffer because of their own ideology, and shows them that you cannot restrict women from doing what they love, from playing the sport that they love.

"But it takes resistance, it takes resilience, it takes courage, and I think we can take this journey and this historic moment to show the next generation that nothing is impossible."

The selection phase for the next Afghan Women United team is underway, with regional selection camps in England and Australia.


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4 min read

Published

By Arielle Richards

Source: SBS News



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