Should teams boycott Afghanistan at the ICC Champions Trophy?
The Stumped team discuss whether boycotts work.
Alison Mitchell, Jim Maxwell and Charu Sharma are joined by Zimbabwe鈥檚 first black cricketer, Henry Olonga, as we ask whether boycotts work in cricket?
It鈥檚 in light of political pressure on England and South Africa to pull out of their matches against Afghanistan鈥檚 men at next month's ICC Champions Trophy. It's due to the Taliban regime's oppression of women, which includes a ban on playing sport. Olonga, alongside Andy Flower, took a stand against Robert Mugabe鈥檚 regime by wearing a black armband in the 2003 World Cup game against Namibia. It was to symbolise "the death of democracy" in the country.
Henry's been living in exile from Zimbabwe ever since and told the programme the current situation has echoes of 2003 and that the International Cricket Council and international Governments should be the ones making the decision not to play, rather than the players.
We also talk to Australia Ashes winner now commentator, Mel Jones, on the role she played on getting many of those women out of the country when the Taliban returned to power in 2021. Mel鈥檚 also been involved in organising the team鈥檚 exhibition match which will be played ahead of the opening day of the Women鈥檚 Ashes Test in Melbourne later this month.
Photo: Groundmen hold a large national flag of Afghanistan on the eve of the 2023 ICC Men's Cricket World Cup one-day international (ODI) match between India and Afghanistan at the Arun Jaitley Stadium in New Delhi on October 10, 2023. Credit: (AFP via Getty Images)
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Stumped
The weekly cricket show from 成人快手 Sport in association with ABC and Akashvani.