Afghan athlete under police protection in France after denouncing Taliban

Marzieh Hamidi, a former taekwondo champion for Afghanistan who now lives in France as a refugee, has been placed under police protection after protesting against the Taliban's treatment of women.

Hamidi, 21, used to compete on the Afghan national taekwondo team but was forced to flee when the Taliban returned to power in 2021.

She told RFI she had been flooded with threatening messages since posting a video on social media at the end of August denouncing "gender apartheid" in her homeland.

Filming herself on a Paris street, Hamidi denounced the Taliban's restrictions on women's clothing, education and other basic freedoms, including doing sport.

She invited her followers to use the hashtag #LetUsExist to "be the voice for [those] who are voiceless inside Afghanistan".

Re-shared thousands of times, the post ended up attracting the attention of Afghan media.

The situation escalated when a journalist asked Hamidi her opinion of Afghanistan's popular national cricket team, she told RFI. The men's squad has continued to play with the backing of the Taliban government, while women players have been driven into exile.

Hamidi told the interviewer that she believed the male players were "normalising the Taliban" and did not represent Afghan women. "So for me, they are a terrorist cricket team, not a national cricket team," she said.

The interview appeared on YouTube a few days later and quickly drew a backlash.


Read more on RFI English

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