One of the main repercussions of the Taliban acquisition of Afghanistan was the reduction of women’s rights, including the prohibition of all sports for women and girls in the country. (Spaij 2024). The Women’s Crick of Afghanistan was also consistently affected and the Cricks players of Afghanistan first sought refuge in the neighbor Pakistan and then awarded emergency visas by Australia (Babar 2024).
The difficult situation of the exiled female Cricket players of Afghanistan once again while playing an exhibition game with a Cricket player without borders XI on January 30, 2025 in Melbourne (Asja 2025). Tim Watts, the Assistant Minister of Special Affairs of Australia, present in the party underlined the importance of inclusion and empowerment in sport and also stressed that the rules of the International Cricket Council (ICC) demand that its full members have the responsibility of promoting women’s Cricket (Watts 2025).

There are also leg calls from some sectors in England and South Africa to boycott the matches of their national team against Afghanistan in the next Trophy of ICC champions. In England, more than 160 politicians signed a letter urging the officials of the Cricket Board of England and Wales (ECB), as well as the players of England to “speak against the horrible treatment of women and girls in Afghanistan under the Taliban … (and) consider a boycott of the next game against Afghanistan (The Guardian 2025). South Africa Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie has advocated that the South Africa Cricket (CSA), the South Africa Cricket Apex body should boycott the bail of the country’s champions trophy with Afghanistan (Gleeson 2025). However, both the ECB and the CSA have denied any possibility of boycotting the parties of respect for their countries with Afghanistan despite expressing Conerns for the difficult situation of the crickets of Afghan women. Richard Gould, the executive director of the ECB has written a letter to the CPI to stop the “gender apartheid” (Garle 2025). The president of CSA, Rihan Richards, has advocated a “unified and collective approach to all members of the ICC” (Cricket South Africa 2025).
The ICC’s response to this crisis has a mediocre until now. In 2021, the ICC established a working group for the observance and review of Crickt in Afghanistan, in partulate after the acquisition of the Taliban. (Cricinfo ESPN 2021). One of the CPI membership criteria clearly establishes that its full and associated members must have a satisfactory women’s road structure. Complete members must have an adequate female Cricket structure and the National Cricket Boards must allocate a part of their funds for the development of women’s Cricket. The CPI has not suspended the ACB, saying that this cannot penalize the Cricket board or players to comply with the laws established by the government of their country. (Passa 2023).
The Women’s Exiled Women’s Cricket players have argued that a part of the CPI funds for ACB should be used to finance a female team or exiles from Afghanistan. However, the CPI refuses to buy this line of thought. A CPI spokesman said that only the Afghan national body has the authority to recognize a national team. However, such an argument represents a reluctance by the ICC to make a strong decision. The CPI can take a sheet from the International Olympic Committee (IOC) that continues to recognize the exiled leadership of the Afghan Olympic Committee as the official representative of the Afghan athletes (The economist 2024” Gonella-Platts 2024).

It seems very unlikely at this point that the ICC suspends the ACB or emulates the route show through the IOC. The CPI continues Dilly-Dally in the issue of restoring women’s Cricket in Afghanistan. CPI battery critics of being without teeth on this issue and there that the ICC does not feel that the “women’s rights are worth it.” (Nicholson and Maurice 2023). It should also be taken into account that Cricket Afghan players are opposed to the extent of prohibitThe economist 2024).
However, so far, the leadership of the ICC has failed in the Women’s Women’s Cricket players. The United Nations has said that access to sports is a fundamental human right (United Nations 2016). To deny opportunities for women to participate in sports, including cryket, violates thesis rights.
Principal researcher of the International Institute for Non -Aligned Studies, Delhi and Sports Columnist in New Delhi Times.
Blog posts represent the author’s opinions and not those of Sports & EU or their members members