Fatima Yousufi escaped from the Taliban with a backpack and a clear goal: to play international soccer. He arrived in Australia with nothing, but with the determination to continue representing his country.
When the Taliban regained power in 2021, they shut down all women’s sports. The Afghan national team players hid. Thirteen of them managed to settle in Australia after an urgent evacuation.
For five years they lived, trained and played in the hope of carrying the Afghan flag again in official tournaments. In April, FIFA recognized the Afghan women’s team as eligible for international competition.
This week, 23 members of the Afghan Women United program are camping in Auckland, New Zealand, and will play matches against the Cook Islands.
A hymn that moves
“It was a special day when we found out that Afghanistan could represent our flag again. It’s the result of hard work over the last four or five years,” midfielder Mona Amini told The Associated Press.
Seven months ago they played the “Unite” tournament and beat Libya. Amini remembers: “Hearing our anthem after three years was incredible.”
Yousufi, goalkeeper in Melbourne, celebrated: “We are going to have a national team! It is the best thing that could have happened. We arrived in Australia and we had lost everything.”
The risk of playing in Afghanistan
Even before the Taliban return, it was difficult for a woman to play sports. “Leaving home was a risk. The Taliban could discover that we were playing soccer,” Amini said. “But we all fought to create this team and now we are happy to continue together.”
Yousufi explained that he left with only one backpack to be safe. “Not being able to be an official national team was like losing the game.”
A voice for those who stayed
The players now seek to represent women and girls in Afghanistan. “We want to be their voice to build a new generation of the women’s team,” Amini said.
Yousufi, welcomed by the Australian government, said: “We are a team that can change the way of thinking. We want to show that women have the right to study and play sports.”




