Former Afghan women's soccer captain Khalida Popal has asked her team members to get rid of everything for their own safety.
(Photo Courtesy: Instagram/@khalidagirlpower)
“Today I’m calling them and telling them, take down their names, remove their identities,” said former Afghan women's soccer captain Khalida Popal in an interview with Reuters on 19 August.
Popal, who currently is living in Copenhagen, further added that with the return of the Taliban, women players in the country should take urgent steps to remove all traces of their sporting history for their protection.
Apart from Popal, the same advice was given by a source close to Afghanistan's cycling federation saying that women players in the country have been told to stay at home and are barred from posting on social media, reported The Guardian.
The source further added that the Taliban's return was so sudden that it gave no time or chance for the women to flee the country.
“Everything changed in 48 hours. Nobody was able to escape. If it [had been] a week or something, we would have sent them to neighbouring countries. But it all happened on the same day. The airport is closed; everywhere you see terrorists with guns.”
Popal on Sunday, 15 August, took to Linkedin to post about the same.
She wrote, "I feel pain & heaviness in my chest. I have a difficult time to breath & sleep knowing the life of many women and girls in my country Afghanistan is in great danger. (sic)"
Khalida Popal via Linkedin.
Popal also mentioned that the footballers she had spoken to were scared as anybody can knock on their doors anytime and they don't have anywhere to go to.
She wrote, "Women and girls are writing to me that they are scared of the Taliban, they can not sleep because they have seen videos of the Taliban taking women & girls as their sex slaves. I have no words to write to help them, I am helpless. (sic)"
When Taliban was in power from 1996 to 2001, women were not allowed to work and girls were forbidden to go to school or participate in sports. It was mandatory for women to wear burqas while going out and they could only step out when accompanied by a male relative.
Several athletes received death threats in the past decade even before the return of the Taliban.
Zakia Khudadadi, who was supposed to be Afghanistan’s first woman Paralympian, had to withdraw from the Tokyo Games this year due to political unrest in their country. Another Afghan athlete, Hossain Rasouli, couldn't make it to the Tokyo Olympics for the same reason.
The International Paralympic Committee released a notice saying, “regrettably NPC [National Paralympic Committee] Afghanistan will no longer participate in the Tokyo 2020 Paralympic Games."
They added, "Due to the serious ongoing situation in the country, all airports are closed and there is no way for them to travel to Tokyo. We hope the team and officials remain safe and well during this difficult time.”
(With inputs from The Guardian and iNews)
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