Benafsha Hashimi, one of the exiled Afghanistan players in Australia, said the upcoming match could be a stepping stone to wider recognition as a team.”Of course I want to play under my country name, that is my dream, that was the reason that I’m here,” Hashimi said. “We have tried many times, email and sending the letter to the ICC, but unfortunately all the time they’re just ignoring us, which is quite upsetting.”We are living in different states, I know, but the thing is we were living in a different state in Afghanistan too. It doesn’t really make anything change. I can still play and we can still catch up. It’s not really a big deal to do it, so I will definitely go for it.”We said all the time that we can’t go by jumping, we have to go step by step. It’s a good starting step. I’m so excited for it. I can say it’s a special feeling inside that I can’t really explain it how it’s been to me. It’s like a really big step for me.”FundingThe ECB, who along with Cricket Australia have declined to field men’s teams in bilateral series against Afghanistan, recently wrote to the ICC asking, among other things that they withhold a proportion of funding from the Afghanistan Cricket Board until women’s and girls’ cricket is reinstated in the country.Richard Gould, the ECB’s chief executive, also requested that the reallocation of those funds be discussed at the ICC’s Women’s Cricket Committee meeting in March and that this money be boosted by ring-fenced funds from the ICC Development Fund. It is understood that the matter was discussed at the ICC’s annual meetings last July, without an outcome.Firooza Amiri, one of the players who escaped Afghanistan and is now based in Melbourne, told the podcast that this week’s game marked the start of the team’s goal to play for Afghanistan – in whatever guise – and in receiving financial support to do that.”It’s not only a match for us, it’s a huge step,” Amiri said. “It’s going to be a very big step that we are taking toward our journey of cricket.”The ICC ignored us as a refugee team and also as a Afghanistan national team that represent Afghanistan and obviously the Afghanistan Cricket Board ignored us as well. But Cricket Australia took a huge step for us.”From here, it doesn’t matter if we are Afghan Exiles or Afghan XI or Afghanistan refugee team or anything. Our hope is only to represent Afghanistan in some ways… and women outside and inside Afghanistan look at us as a representative of Afghanistan.”What we are hoping from here is to continue playing for Afghanistan under Afghan XI team and we just want world help us with this journey.”

About the Author

+300
+500
+1200
+1500
+750
$
JOIN NOW
Buddy Bonus
Sports Free Bets
Bonus