Published: 12:31, September 30, 2020 | Updated: 15:45, June 5, 2023
Afghan female climber wants to 'show the world what we can do'
By Reuters

Mt. Qomolangma (centre, left) and other mountain peaks are pictured from Namche Bazar, some 140 kilometers northeast of Kathmandu, Nepal on March 26, 2020. Fatima Sultani, an 18-year-old Afghan female mountaineer, plans to climb Afghanistan's Mir Samir mountain and after that travel to Nepal to scale Qomolangma. (PRAKASH MATHEMA / AFP)

KABUL - Eighteen-year old Fatima Sultani gazes at the peak of a mountain near Afghanistan's capital Kabul after completing a morning climbing session, considering her next challenge.

She and her team of nine young Afghan mountaineers, including three women, are hoping to climb Afghanistan's Mir Samir mountain and after that travel to Nepal to summit the world's highest peak Mount Qomolangma, also known as Mount Everest in the West. 

My main goal is to show the world that Afghan women are strong and can do the most challenging work that men do. When I became aware that women from foreign countries come here to conquer high peaks I thought ... why can't we Afghan women conquer these peaks?

Fatima Sultani, an 18-year-old Afghan female mountaineer

"My main goal is to show the world that Afghan women are strong and can do the most challenging work that men do," she told Reuters. "When I became aware that women from foreign countries come here to conquer high peaks I thought ... why can't we Afghan women conquer these peaks?"

ALSO READ: In Kandahar, new gym creates safe space for Afghan women

Sultani has continued climbing throughout the coronavirus pandemic, in August making it to the summit of the 7,492 meter Noshakh Peak in the Hindu Kush mountain range in northern Afghanistan, becoming the youngest woman in the world to do so.

But as the Islamist Taliban hold peace talks with the Afghan government in Doha, many women in Afghanistan worry the militant group may exert its influence through formal political channels. 

When the Taliban ruled the country between 1996 and 2001, they banned education for females and barred women from leaving the house without a male relative.

The group says it has changed but many women remain sceptical.

"When I got into sports, I knew that I would face some problems in the future, for example, one of the issues was that maybe the Taliban would hinder sport for women, but still I'm ready to face the challenge," Fatima said.

READ MORE: Afghan woman wins recognition, sparks Taliban opposition

When she's not training in the mountains, Fatima lives in Kabul with her parents, younger sister and cat. Her father said he will continue to celebrate Fatima's achievements but has lingering concerns about her safety.

"I am worried about this, (the Taliban) oppose women's sports," Abdul Wahed Sultani said. "(But) I told Fatima that you are free to do whatever sport you want to, even mountaineering, and I will support her as much as I can."