Khalida Popal
(Image credit: Getty Images)

The Taliban's return to power in Afghanistan in 2021 dealt a massive blow to women's rights in an already deeply conservative nation.

Almost overnight, women saw their access to sport and education blocked, while those who had previously spoken out against the militant organisation found themselves suddenly under threat.

Thankfully, help was on hand for some thanks to the efforts of activist and former Afghan women's national team captain Khalida Popal. Popal had long made a name for herself as a leader and pioneer of women's rights in Afghanistan, having played a central role in the establishment of a women's national team in her home country. After the re-emergence of the Taliban, she aided in the evacuation of girls and women in desperate need to leave.

"Unfortunately, our nation collapsed after the return to power of the Taliban, but we were ready to fight in whatever way we could," Popal tells FourFourTwo following the release of her new book, My Beautiful Sisters, which was nominated for the William Hill Sports Book of the Year. "The very notion of an Afghan womens football team is built on the foundations of activism. We were already fighters, who had stood up and refused to be broken. We publicly labelled the Taliban as our enemy even before they returned.


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Publisher: FourFourTwo

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