News

Diplomatic rhetoric must turn to action to support the more than 20 million women and girls living under the Taliban regime.
The ICC announced it will create a task force to support Afghan women cricketers who fled after the Taliban’s return to power in 2021. For many, including Afghan and Sapan, the decision is a ...
“Victims of the Taliban’s oppression can’t rely on their own courts for justice. That’s why they turn to the ICC, and why it's so important for me to be able to partner with them in their fight for ...
Afghanistan’s Taliban rulers have followed through on decrees aimed at erasing women from public life in the country and ...
Afghanistan’s national women’s cricket team was formed in 2020, prompted by the rules of the International Cricket Council, ...
Female soccer players fled Afghanistan, but from around the world they are campaigning to be able to represent their country ...
The UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) on Thursday released its first quarterly human rights report of 2025, ...
The Afghanistan Cricket Board will continue to receive the funding that they are due from the ICC as a full-member nation - desptie not having a women's team.
Malala Yousafzai believes there is more work to be done to help Afghanistan women and cricketers across the world, including ...
Since the Taliban regained control in 2021, women’s sports, including cricket, have been banned in Afghanistan. As a result, the ACB stands as the only full ICC member without an active women ...
ICC chairman Jay Shah said his organization is ... traveled to Pakistan before being evacuated to Australia. Under Taliban rule, the Afghanistan Cricket Board cannot field a national women ...