FE Today Logo
Search date: 04-09-2021 Return to current date: Click here

Taliban, Afghan flags side by side at 'unity' cricket match

Top Afghan cricketers take part


September 04, 2021 00:00:00


KABUL : Spectators wave Afghanistan's and Taliban flags as they watch the Twenty20 cricket trial match played between two Afghan teams at the Kabul International Cricket Stadium here Friday — AFP

KABUL, Sept 03 (AFP): A near-full house turned out to watch Afghanistan's top cricketers play in a trial match Friday, with Taliban and Afghan flags waving side by side in what sports officials called a show of national unity.

It was the first match since the Taliban swept to power on August 15, leaving organisers of sports and cultural events wondering what is now acceptable under the hardline Islamists' rule.

The two sides -- called Peace Defenders and Peace Heroes -- featured many members of the Afghan national team, currently preparing for the Twenty20 World Cup to be played in UAE and Oman from October 17.

"It is great to be here and watch cricket," a Taliban commander named Hamza said at the stadium in Kabul, an American M-16 rifle slung over his shoulder.

He was in charge of a contingent of Taliban fighters keeping guard among the crowd -- some watching the game more intently than the spectators.

"I am a player myself," said Hamza. "An all-rounder."

The return of the Taliban has sparked widespread fear in Afghanistan and in the international community, reviving memories of their first stint in power from 1996 to 2001, when they imposed a harsh version of Islamic law.

That regime banned most forms of entertainment -- including many sports -- and stadiums doubled as public execution venues.

Sports the Taliban did allow were strictly controlled, and were only for men to play or watch.

Certainly there were no women among the crowd of around 4,000 on Friday, but there was plenty of enthusiasm as the teams played a Twenty20 match -- the shortest version of the game -- scheduled to finish in time for Friday prayers, the most important of the week.

Cricket was barely known in Afghanistan until the early 2000s, and its explosive rise in popularity is linked with conflict -- the sport was picked up in Pakistan by Afghan refugees who then seeded it in their home country.

The national team has enjoyed a meteoric rise on the international scene since then, gaining coveted Test status in 2017 and now ranking among the top 10 sides in the world in the one-day and Twenty20 formats.

On Friday, fans waved Afghan and Taliban flags side by side, while "Baba cricket" -- an elderly superfan dressed head to toe in national colours -- was ushered to a prime spot in the stand.

Entry was free for spectators on Friday, although everyone was patted down by Taliban guards as they entered the stadium near Chaman Uzuri -- a Kabul neighbourhood dominated by Pashtuns, who make up a majority of Taliban fighters.

Although many Kabul residents say security has improved in the weeks since the government fell, the Taliban are still on alert following the Islamic State suicide bomb attack at the airport last week that killed more than 100 people -- including 13 American troops as they wrapped up a chaotic withdrawal.


Share if you like