Former Football Captain Khalida Popal On The Dangers Facing Afghan Women In Sport

'I received many death threats.'
|

England’s Lionesses are still battling to be paid the same as male players, but the situation for women in football elsewhere in the world is even worse.

In Afghanistan, female players are not fighting for equal pay, they’re fighting for their lives.

Which is why The Huffington Post UK has partnered with UN Women to share their stories and call for change.

Khalida Popal, the first female captain of the Afghan National Football team, reveals just how dire the situation is.

 “In Afghanistan, women football players are called prostitutes,” she says.

“Football is seen as a male game.” 

Open Image Modal
UN Women/Ryan Brown
Khalida Popal

Popal’s mother taught her to play football and at first she played just for fun. But soon, she started facing resistance from both men and women. 

“My teachers kicked me out of their class because I played football. But if men can play football, why not women?” she says.

Undeterred, Popal stuck with the sport and in 2007 became captain of the first ever women’s Afghan National Football team.

“I chose football as a tool to stand for my rights, and to help other women stand for their rights,” she says.

“In my country, women are not respected. They are not even seen as human. It is important to first work with women to build their capacity and confidence.

“Women have to first believe that they are human, they are strong.”

The athlete says football has allowed like-minded women to come together as a group and raise awareness of the gender inequality so many still face in Afghanistan.

“We were four girls in the team. People threw rocks and garbage at us. I received many death threats,” she says.

With her life at risk, Popal fled Afghanistan in 2011. She now lives in asylum in Denmark where she campaigns to raise the profile of women’s sport around the world.

She recently spoke at an event co-hosted by UN Women, Brazil and the International Olympic Committee (IOC), which highlighted sport as a vehicle to achieve gender equality and end violence against women and girls.

“I had to choose between my family and being alive. I left my country. It was the most difficult decision,” she says.

“I am a woman, and I am strong. I will not be silenced.”

This story was replicated from the UN Women website. HuffPost UK is an official partner of UN Women’s Step It Up Media Compactan alliance of media organisations committed to playing an active role in advancing gender issues within the framework of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Inspirational Women In Sport
Lisa Mason, Gymnast(01 of10)
Open Image Modal
When Olympic gymnast Lisa Mason announced at 31 that she was planning to make a comeback after a 13-year break, nobody took her seriously. So, with no moral or financial support, the single mum set out to prove the world wrong. In the 2013 English Championships, her first comeback competition, Mason won gold in the vault and came fourth in the finals at the National British Championships after just five months of training. She is now training for Rio 2016. (credit:Alex Livesey via Getty Images)
Nicola Adams, Boxer(02 of10)
Open Image Modal
Nicola Adams became the first British boxer to win an Olympic gold medal, at London 2012. The Olympic, European and Commonwealth champion has since become a role model to a nation of budding female boxers and has been justly garnered with an MBE. Adams is also seen as an inspiration in the LGBT community, and topped the Independent’s Pink List, which celebrates Britain’s most influential LGBT figures. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Clare Balding, Sports TV Presenter & Campaigner(03 of10)
Open Image Modal
Clare Balding OBE was elevated from respected TV sports presenter to national treasure following her incredible coverage of London 2012 Olympics and Paralympics – and garnered a BAFTA Special Award. But Balding’s most inspirational role is that of tireless campaigner for women's sport - from gender equality and media coverage to inspiring young women to embrace sport. (credit:Jon Furniss/Invision/AP)
Jo Pavey, Athlete(04 of10)
Open Image Modal
In 2014 (a month before her 41st birthday and just eight months after giving birth to her second child), Jo Pavey MBE won her first major championship gold, for the 10,000m at the European Championships in Zurich. As the oldest female European champion, Jo ‘Supermum’ Pavey has proved that motherhood does not make a woman less valuable – and that life really does begin at 40! Look out for Pavey at the 2016 Olympics. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Rimla Akhtar, FA Council Board Member(05 of10)
Open Image Modal
Rimla Akhtar is the first Muslim woman - one of only six women in total - to sit on the 121-strong FA Council. Chair of the Muslim Women’s Sports Foundation, Akhtar advised Olympic organisers on female representation at London 2012. The Liverpool FC fan who plays and coaches, has been involved in numerous campaigns to make football more inclusive, including a successful campaign to get FIFA to allow women to play football, wearing hijabs. (credit:Scott Heavey via Getty Images)
Jessica Ennis-Hill, Athlete(06 of10)
Open Image Modal
The poster girl of the 2012 Olympics, Jessica Ennis-Hill inspired a nation of young, aspiring female athletes to follow their dreams. In 2014, the Olympic heptathlon champion and British record-holder gave birth to her first child, Reggie. Months later she qualified for the 2016 Olympics. In 2014, the star bravely spoke out when her local football club, Sheffield United, was considering re-hiring convicted rapist Ched Evans on his release from prison. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Christine Ohuruogu, Athlete (07 of10)
Open Image Modal
Christine Ohuruogu MBE is one of Great Britain’s most successful athletes of all time having won 400m Olympic gold and silver, and two individual world titles. After 2012, Ohuruogu, who also has a degree in Linguistics from prestigious London university UCL, set herself the task of visiting every school in her London borough to inspire a new generation of athletes. (credit:ASSOCIATED PRESS)
Martine Wright, Paralympian(08 of10)
Open Image Modal
Martine Wright is living proof that anything really is possible. After losing both her legs while on the Underground during the July 7 London bombings, the determined survivor began training as a sitting volleyball player and went on to be selected for the London 2012 British Paralympics team. Her positivity and unparalleled strength of character make her the ideal ambassador for disabled sport. (credit:Matthew Lloyd via Getty Images)
Fran Kirby, Footballer(09 of10)
Open Image Modal
The shining star of the 2015 Women’s World Cup, Fran Kirby’s meteoric rise has not been without its obstacles. Just three years ago, the 22-year-old Reading striker walked out of an England under-19 camp and announced she was quitting the game after being struck with a debilitating bout of depression – a delayed reaction to the sudden death of her mother when she was 14. Her remarkable comeback is testament to her courage and resilience. (credit:Clive Rose - FIFA via Getty Images)
Debbie Jevans, CEO, England Ruby 2015(10 of10)
Open Image Modal
Former professional tennis player Jevans is the first female chief executive to organise a Rugby World Cup, and the first woman to be appointed director of sport for an Olympic Games when she led the double victory of an Olympic and Paralympic Games at London 2012. One of the few women sitting at the top table in sport, she is an ardent campaigner against gender imbalance in sport. (credit:Patrick Bolger via Getty Images)

Before You Go