Wasiq last month told SBS that the Taliban would allow men’s cricket to continue and that it has given approval for the men’s national team to travel to Australia for a test match in November.
Australia’s SBS TV has quoted a Taliban
spokesperson as saying that women's sports — and women's cricket specifically will be banned by his group in Afghanistan.
“In cricket, they might face a situation
where their face and body will not be covered. Islam does not allow women to be
seen like this," the network quoted Ahmadullah Wasiq, the deputy head of
the Taliban’s cultural commission, as saying.
“It is the media era, and there will be
photos and videos, and then people watch it. Islam and the Islamic Emirate do
not allow women to play cricket or play the kind of sports where they get
exposed.”
Australia's Sport Minister Richard
Colbeck said the Taliban’s decision on women's sport was “deeply concerning”
and he urged organisations such as the International Cricket Council to take
action.
“Excluding women from sport at any level
is unacceptable,” Colbeck said in a statement. “We urge international sport
authorities, including the International Cricket Council, to take a stand
against this appalling ruling."
Players from Afghanistan's women's
soccer team are among dozens of athletes given visas to live in Australia and
have been undergoing quarantine in place for the COVID-19 pandemic.
On Tuesday, the Taliban announced an
all-male interim government for Afghanistan stacked with veterans of their
hard-line rule from the 1990s and the 20-year battle against the U.S.-led
coalition.
A policy statement accompanying the
Cabinet announcement sought to allay fears of Afghanistan’s neighbors and the
rest of the world, but was unlikely to calm the fears of women, who didn’t get
a single post.
The statement spoke of protecting the rights of minorities and the underprivileged, and it promised education “to all countrymen within the framework of Sharia.” Women were not mentioned in the three-page statement.
Last Saturday, Taliban special forces in camouflage fired their weapons into the air to end a protest march in Kabul by women demanding equal rights.
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