‘Where is hope?’: BBL star’s threat lashed

‘Where is hope?’: BBL star’s threat lashed

A number one human rights activist has taken intention at spin star Rashid Khan for his condemnation of Cricket Australia’s choice to withdraw from an upcoming one-day sequence in opposition to Afghanistan.

As the choice sparked division among the many cricketing world, with threats from Afghan gamers and their cricket board to boycott the BBL in protest, Khan was lashed for his assertion.

CA’s choice was in direct response to the ruling Taliban’s ban on ladies and ladies going to highschool or college and from taking part in organised sport.

Afghanistan is the one full member of the International Cricket Council to not have a ladies’s group, a prerequisite for each different nation, together with Australia.

Its personal prolonged, 400-word response wherein the Afghanistan Cricket Board labelled CA’s transfer “pathetic” didn’t as soon as point out ladies’s cricket.

Last November, a number of gamers visited the Afghanistan Prime Minister’s workplace and praised the Taliban’s assist of the lads’s group.

Khan, who has taken almost 100 BBL wickets as a headliner for the Adelaide Strikers, stated CA’s choice would power him to rethink his future within the competitors.

And as different Afghanistan gamers additionally lashed CA, Sharhazad Akbar, the manager director at Afghan human rights organisation Rawadari, referred to as out Khan for failing to recognise the core subject of the shortage of rights for ladies.

“Rashid you are a hero to millions of us, which is why I take issue with this tweet. How is cricket bringing hope when half the population are deprived of the right to education, when the Quranic command “Iqra” is being violated? Where is hope for Afg ladies & ladies?” he tweeted.

Leading cricket commentator Isha Guha referred to as the scenario “complex” however questioned how the lads’s group could possibly be supported if there was no progress for ladies within the nation.

“Opinions will be different but I just hope the Afghan women who aren’t allowed to play/have no voice for fear of safety are thought of in this,” Guha stated on Twitter.

“The men playing has offered hope to the nation & it’s sad when they can’t play too but every time they step out is a reminder to the women that they cannot. Can the ICC offer a neutral banner? The understanding is that funding has not been withdrawn but how are the women being helped?”

In December final 12 months, the Taliban positioned a ban on ladies attending highschool and college and has banned ladies collaborating in sport since returning to energy in 2021.

It’s the second time in two years that CA has cancelled a bilateral fixture with Afghanistan as a result of Taliban authorities‘s policies on women following the postponement of the one-off Test that was scheduled to be played in Hobart in November 2021.

Australia is slated to meet Afghanistan twice more in the next Future Tours cycle, with three T20Is scheduled at a neutral venue in August 2024.

The Afghanistan Cricket Board also threatened their players’ participation within the BBL of their response to CA’s transfer.

“Afghanistan Cricket Board is extremely disappointed and saddened by the pathetic statement of Cricket Australia to withdraw from Afghanistan’s home three-match ODI series in March and will officially write to the International Cricket Council about the issue,” it stated in an announcement.

“The decision to withdraw from playing the upcoming ODI series against Afghanistan is unfair and unexpected and will have a negative impact on the development and growth of cricket in Afghanistan as well as will affect the love and passion of the Afghan nation for the game.

“The Afghanistan Cricket Board is closely monitoring the situation and is considering taking action, including officially writing to ICC and rethinking the participation of Afghan players in the Big Bash League if the decision to withdraw from Afghanistan’s home series is not overturned.”