Yahoo – AFP,
25 February 2016
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Afghan boy
Murtaza Ahmadi proudly wears one of the jerseys sent by his idol
Lionel Messi
(AFP Photo/Mahdy Mehraeen)
|
Kabul (AFP)
- Argentine football star Lionel Messi has sent not one, but two jerseys to the
five-year-old Afghan boy who became an Internet sensation last month when he
was pictured wearing a plastic bag with "Messi" scrawled on it in
marker pen.
Murtaza Ahmadi
travelled with his family from eastern Ghazni province to Kabul to receive the
gifts sent by Messi through UNICEF, where he is a goodwill ambassador.
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Afghan boy
Murtaza Ahmadi is
hoping to meet his idol Lionel
Messi (AFP Photo/Shah Marai)
|
Messi
autographed the jerseys, writing "With much love" in Spanish on them,
and added a football to the treasure trove, UNICEF said.
Purchasing
a Messi jersey was beyond the means of Murtaza's poor family, members of the persecuted
ethnic Hazara minority living in volatile Ghazni, near Kabul.
His elder
brother Homayoun, 15, improvised the blue-and-white-striped plastic shirt with
Messi's name scrawled in black marker, and posted the photos of Murtaza wearing
it on Facebook in mid-January.
The image
touched a chord with football fans around the world, and earned Murtaza the
sobriquet "little Messi" on social media.
The Afghan
Football Federation had said Messi was in contact with them to arrange a
meeting with Murtaza as soon as possible, with the Spanish embassy in Kabul
telling AFP it would do whatever possible to facilitate.
![]() |
Afghan boy
Murtaza Ahmadi earned the nickname "little Messi"
after pictures went
viral of him wearing an improvised shirt made out
of a plastic bag (AFP Photo)
|
But a
source close to Messi's entourage said earlier this month they could neither
confirm nor deny the speculation regarding a possible meeting.
Setting up
a meeting in Afghanistan, in the grip of a fierce Taliban insurgency, is fraught
with security challenges.
Football
and cricket are the two most popular sports in the war-ravaged country -- but
sports were rarely played under Taliban rule, and the football stadium in Kabul
was a notorious venue for executions, stonings and mutilations.



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