Amiri had been drinking tea at home with her grandmother in August 2021 when she heard that the Taliban had returned.
“In that moment I was shocked and I felt that I would lose everything,” she said with tears in her eyes, adding that she knew immediately the team would need to leave the country.
“My parents lived through the first time that Taliban were in Afghanistan and they knew what would happen to the girls.
“I didn’t know if I was going to survive. I didn’t know if there was going to be a chance for me and my family to get out of Afghanistan, I didn’t know if we were going to live or die.
“I burned everything, all my certificates, all my medals. There’s nothing left.”
Under Taliban laws, women are banned from universities, sport and parks. It is also forbidden for their voices to be heard outside of their homes.
Amiri’s team-mate Nahida Sapan recalled how the Taliban came to her home searching for her.
“My brother went outside and one of the Talib asked him, ‘Do you know about some cricket girl? We think she lives here.’ My brother was very scared. I had a scorebook for all of my team-mates so I went home and ripped all of the paper up and put it in the trash.”
Sapan, whose brother worked for the previous government, said her family then started receiving calls and messages from the Taliban.
“They were direct threats. They were saying: ‘We will find you and if we find you, we will not let you live. If we find one of you we will find all of you.’
“I was so worried about all of the team girls. We all needed a safe place.”
That safe place was to come from an unlikely source on the other side of the world.
Evacuation ‘felt like a Jason Bourne movie’
Thousands of miles away, Mel Jones was sitting in quarantine in an Australian hotel during the Covid-19 pandemic when she received a message from an Indian journalist asking whether she had heard about the Afghan cricket team’s situation.
The players had looked to the Afghanistan Cricket Board (ACB) for assistance after the Taliban took over but received none.
On their own, they were terrified under the rule of the hardline Islamist group.
The journalist put Jones in touch with one of the players and she asked if there was anything she could do to help. The player replied to say that all her team-mates and the backroom staff needed to get out of Afghanistan.
Jones, who won two World Cups with Australia, then went through her contact book and brought volunteers on board, including her friend Emma Staples, who used to work for Cricket Victoria, and Dr Catherine Ordway, who had helped to evacuate Afghan women footballers.
Creating a tight network of people who could help, including on the ground in Afghanistan, they organised visas and transport to eventually get 120 people out of the country, mainly into Pakistan and then on military flights to Dubai. From there they flew to Melbourne or Canberra on commercial flights supported by the Australian government.
“I don’t think I understood the enormity of what we were doing at the time,” Staples said. “We were told that we may not be able to save everyone.
“For me, it was co-ordinating what we joke about now as being a backyard immigration service. It was filing out visa documents, passport documents and trying to transfer money to Afghanistan for the girls to purchase passports.
“It was six weeks of gathering information from the family members, trying to get identification, but we just had this extraordinary spreadsheet that detailed everybody.”
She said communication with the players was “really challenging” but “nothing Google Translate couldn’t fix”.
“We giggle now about the language barrier, I got called different names such as ‘delicious’ and some other odd things,” Staples recalled with a smile.
“It all happened so quickly for them that I don’t think they had time to think about what they’ve had to leave behind. I have no doubt that some of them are going through survivor’s guilt.”
Jones, 52, who now works as a cricket broadcaster, said there were moments when it was not clear that the mission would succeed.
“We had to fight the system when everyone kept saying it was impossible. Things were happening minute to minute,” Jones said.
“Without sounding flippant, there were moments that felt like you were in a Jason Bourne movie,” she said, recalling trying to commentate on television while also messaging a player who was struggling to find the right car that would take her to safety.
“She couldn’t find the car and was going up to different people and I had to warn her you can’t do that [for safety reasons], but then I had another commentary stint so I had to say ‘don’t do anything until I get back!’.
“That was the fearful part for me, just making sure they made the right decisions.”
