At the time, they had less than a week left on their Pakistani visas and were fearful of what might happen to them if they were forced to return to Afghanistan, where the Taliban has banned girls from playing football.
Narges, 18, had told Sky News: “The only thing all of us know is that we don’t want to go back to Afghanistan again.”
Asked if she had a message for the UK government, the teenager had added: “If you can accept us we would be really happy that we can live in UK and have the UK as a host country for us.
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“The only thing we want from your government and your humanitarian institutions is to find a host country for us in order to help us to be happy again and be alive again, to make a new life and be good football players in the future.”
But on Saturday evening, she and teammate Sabria said: “Our lives have been saved and we are eternally grateful to all.
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“Especially to the efforts from our new British friend Siu-Anne Marie Gill from the ROKIT Foundation for keeping us all inspired – it was very hard – to keep believing that UK will fight for saving our lives.”
Ms Gill said: “We learned on Friday that the UK government has granted authority for the Afghan National Women’s Junior Football Team to come to the UK.
“This is fantastic news, and we are most grateful to Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Home Secretary Priti Patel for this life-saving decision.
“It has been a long journey enabled by the Prime Minster of Pakistan, Imran Khan, the Pakistan Football Federation, Jonathan Kendrick’s ROKiT Group, Football for Peace, Leeds United Football Club and former Afghan Women’s Football Captain Khalida Popal.
“Like football, it has been a team effort where every player has had a vital role.
“These young sportswomen and their families are so thrilled to have been given a second chance in life, here in the home of football.
“The next step is to settle them into their new home. We will do all we can to support them in this process, and the communities that welcome them.”
A man has been arrested on suspicion of attempted murder after a car was driven on to the pavement in central London in the early hours of Christmas Day.
Four people were taken to hospital after the incident on Shaftesbury Avenue, with one said to be in a life-threatening condition.
Metropolitan Police officers were called to reports of a crash and a car driving on the wrong side of the road at 12.45am.
In a statement, police said the incident was isolated and not terror related.
A cordon is in place outside the Sondheim Theatre on Shaftesbury Avenue, which is the London home of the musical Les Miserables. Shaftesbury Avenue is at the heart of London‘s West End and the city’s theatre district.
Blood, a jacket, pair of shoes and a hat are visible on the pavement inside the cordon.
A man with a knife was shot dead by armed police in Redditch after “several hours” of negotiations on Christmas Eve, police have said.
West Mercia Police were called to a property in Fownhope Close, Redditch, at around 2pm on Christmas Eve to reports of a man with a knife.
Police negotiators arrived at the scene in Worcestershire and “attempts were made to resolve the situation by engaging the man over several hours”.
But at 7.40pm the 39 year old was shot by armed police – and he was pronounced dead just after 8pm.
No one else was inside the property at the time, the force added.
A mandatory referral to the police watchdog – the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC) – has been made and an investigation been launched.
West Mercia Police’s assistant chief constable Grant Willis described it as a “tragic incident”.
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“We do not underestimate the shock and concern this may cause the local community and I want to reassure residents that we are following all appropriate procedures, this included making an immediate referral to the Independent Office for Police Conduct (IOPC), as is mandatory and right,” he said.
“We will support their investigation, which will include providing all information we hold, including body worn camera footage.”
This breaking news story is being updated and more details will be published shortly.
The Church of England needs to “kneel in penitence” and “be changed”, the Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell is expected to say in his Christmas Day sermon.
It comes at a challenging time for the Church which has faced criticism over how it handled a number of abuse scandals.
Mr Cottrell will next month effectively become the Church’s temporary leader in place of the outgoing Archbishop of Canterbury Justin Welby.
But Mr Cottrell has himself also faced calls to quit after revelations David Tudor, a priest at the centre of a sexual abuse case, was twice reappointed under him while he was serving as bishop of Chelmsford.
With Mr Welby not giving the 25 December sermon, the focus has moved to what Mr Cottrell will say at York Minster.
He is expected to say the Church must “kneel in penitence and adoration” this Christmas and “be changed”.
He will say about Jesus: “At the centre of the Christmas story is a vulnerable child; a vulnerable child that Herod’s furious wrath will try and destroy, for like every tyrant he cannot abide a rival.
“The Church of England – the Church of England I love and serve – needs to look at this vulnerable child, at this emptying out of power to demonstrate the power of love, for in this vulnerable child we see God.
“If you’re in love, show me. If you have love in your hearts, embody and demonstrate that love by what you do.”
‘Put the needs of others first’
The archbishop will add: “This is what we learn at the manger. Put the needs of others first – those who are cold and hungry and homeless this Christmas.
“Those who are victims of abuse and exploitation. Those who, like the little holy family, have to flee oppression and seek refuge in a foreign land.”
With regards to the Tudor case, Mr Cottrell has acknowledged things “could have been handled differently, and regrets that it wasn’t”.
But Tudor’s victims have branded Mr Cottrell’s response to the case “insulting and upsetting”. They have suggested it’s “inevitable” that he resigns or is forced out of his role.
Bishop of Newcastle Helen-Ann Hartley questioned how Mr Cottrell could have any credibility, and Bishop of Gloucester Rachel Treweek declined to publicly back him.
Meanwhile, the Bishop of Dover, Rose Hudson-Wilkin, is giving the sermon at Canterbury Cathedral in place of Mr Welby and will speak of the birth of Jesus as a triumph of “light and hope” over “fear and darkness”.