KABUL, SEPT 15: Most mornings after praying, 25-year-old Sanah joins several women from her neighbourhood in the Afghan capital Kabul for a walk along the main road before it fills with traffic, never jogging or getting too near to the many Taliban checkpoints.
They exercise secretively, and not for competition, but for a modicum of health and peace of mind in a country where the Taliban government have stopped women from playing sports.
"We cannot go near the Taliban checkpoint because they say, 'Why are you outside the house so early? Where are you going? Why do you need to exercise, you don't have to, so don't'," said Sanah, whose name has been changed -- along with all the women interviewed by AFP -- for fear of reprisal.
The Taliban authorities have implemented an austere interpretation of Islamic law, with women bearing the brunt of restrictions that the United Nations has labelled "gender apartheid".
In November 2022, the Ministry for the Propagation of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice announced women were barred from parks and gyms on the grounds they were not adhering to a dress code that orders them to cover up.
Gyms had previously offered time slots for women, and while some informal women-only fitness clubs still exist, they are rare and low-profile.
Sanah and one of her companions, Latifah, who is middle-aged, used to walk in the large, tree-lined parks in the city.
The last time Latifah went to the park near her house, not long after they were permanently closed to women, she said she was forcibly removed, crying anew as she recalls the incident.
Sanah yearns to become a yoga teacher and guides the group through some gentle aerobic exercises and meditation after their walk.
Pressing her thumb and forefinger together on her knees in the yellow dawn light, away from prying eyes on a protected balcony, Sanah says softly, "Take a deep breath".
Boxing in secret
Forced out of their gym, Rayan and a few fellow women boxers instead visit a friend's home and use what little equipment they have to practise in a society that was already hostile to women in sport, but has now turned draconian.
"We train less, but we never stopped," said the 19-year-old Rayan, watching a video on her phone in which her fists fly in jabs and hooks -- a bittersweet reminder of the avid boxer she once was.
Pulling her headscarf off in a private garden in the Kabul heat, fellow former competitive boxer Bahar said the situation had left her and other Afghan women stressed, exhausted and low.
"But when we box, it pushes all that away for a moment. Even if we only train for a few minutes it makes a big difference," the 20-year-old said, the henna from her recent wedding still staining her hands.
Her husband doesn't know she still boxes.
Many women athletes fled Afghanistan after the Taliban takeover.
The Taliban authorities are not officially recognised by any state. —AFP