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Breaking African football’s menstrual health ‘taboo’

By Celestine Karoney Published March 8, 2025
7 Min Read
African women's football will take centre stage in July next year when South Africa defend their continental title in Morocco
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As women’s football grows in popularity across Africa, one challenge is confronting the taboo around players’ menstrual health.

Contents
Period povertyChampions League drives growth

Kenya international Esse Akida spent part of her career playing professionally in Europe and has experienced a stark difference in attitude back on her home continent.

“The teams I have played for professionally, we had the option of not playing during our menses [period] but here in Kenya that wasn’t available,” Akida told BBC Sport Africa.

“There were team-mates with heavy flow [who] couldn’t play. I have scored on my menses but it doesn’t feel comfortable.”

The forward, who is currently a free agent after spells in Greece, Turkey and Israel, began her career in Kenya with clubs including Matuu and Thika Queens.

Her experiences in Africa highlight the need for greater understanding of the issue.

“I remember telling one of my coaches that I wasn’t comfortable playing during my menses,” the 32-year-old said.

“It turned [out] to look like I didn’t want to play because I felt like a superstar.”

Menstrual health is something the Confederation of African Football (Caf) has been focusing on since 2021, working to combat the culture of silence.

“This is not something we even discuss with our family,” Meskerem Goshime, head of women’s football at Caf, told BBC Sport Africa.

The aim is to help coaches and team staff, who remain predominantly male, offer a more supportive environment in which players can thrive.

“We have had a conversation on the menstruation cycle and how players go through four phases and, depending on those phases, their performance might vary,” revealed the Ethiopian.

“There is a perception that a woman athlete is treated just like a man athlete, but women are not small men. Women are different in terms of physiology.

“[The] menstruation cycle is seen as a taboo in a lot of African cultures.

“But when you speak about it again and again, you make it part of the discussion.”

Period poverty

Kenya women's football player Esse Akida in red kit with the ball at her feet readying for a pass during a training session at an artificial football pitch in Nairobi
Esse Akida has played for Kenya’s Harambee Starlets since 2012

Some female footballers in Africa also struggle with ‘period poverty’ – lacking access to sanitary products – which can impact on their progress in the game.

In 2023, Fifa’s Women’s Health, Wellbeing and Performance project found that about 35% of players on the continent sometimes use old rags as a substitute.

“In my community, menstruation was a hindrance to girls getting into football because even getting money to buy sanitary towels has been a challenge,” said Akida, who comes from Kenya’s coastal region of Kilifi.

“Girls had to balance between playing and staying home. I was lucky to have a supportive mother.

“Not all of my age-mates in Kilifi had the same luxury. It was disheartening to see.”

Akida hopes efforts by Caf and world governing body Fifa can improve the situation for players while she is also advocating for teams in Africa to recruit more female staff.

“Hire female coaches to handle female players or at least have [more] women on the bench,” she added.

“As much as we want coaches who are good tactically, players will be more comfortable discussing such things with women coaches.”

Champions League drives growth

DR Congo’s TP Mazembe are the third club to win the Caf Women’s Champions League title, following Mamelodi Sundowns of South Africa and Morocco’s AS FAR

Caf is hoping that club football, in particular its Women’s Champions League, can drive improvements across all parts of the female game.

The annual competition was first played in 2021, with regional events providing eight qualifiers, but currently there are no plans to expand the number of teams in the final stage.

“It provides a platform for female players to showcase their talent at the continental level, which in turn raises the profile of the sport in general,” said Goshime.

“It has opened doors for a lot of players to be scouted by European or even African teams.

“I think we sometimes don’t talk about it but we see a lot of movement now inside the continent.”

At this year’s edition, held last month, DR Congo’s TP Mazembe claimed their first title with a 1-0 win over former champions and hosts AS FAR of Morocco.

One issue was sparse attendances at fixtures in Casablanca and El Jadida, and Goshime admits there is “still a long way to go” in promoting women’s matches.

However, African players shining on the global stage are helping to sell the brand on the continent.

Zambia striker Barbra Banda is the 2024 BBC Women’s Footballer of the Year and earlier this year her compatriot Racheal Kundananji became the world’s most expensive female player.

Both are stars in the high-profile National Women’s Soccer League in the USA and Goshime thinks such success can inspire a new generation.

“This is a testament to how African players are putting their impact in the global scale,” she said.

“I think it’s sent a message that you have a place in the football world.

“This is a very important message – you can be a global sensation if you play football.”

Zambia captain Barbra Banda is the second African player to win the BBC Women’s Footballer of the Year award, following Nigeria’s Asisat Oshoala

TAGGED:Africa SportFootbalWomen's Football

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