[5] In 1993, Kenya Women's Football Federation was created and organised a national team that represented the country several times in international tournaments between its founding and 1996.
[8][9][10] On 22 July 2006, Kenya played Cameroon women's national football team in Yaounde.
[12] In 2010, the country had a team at the African Women's Championships during the preliminary round but withdrew and ultimately did not compete.
[4] In the 2012 Africa Women's Seniors Championships, the team withdrew from the competition prior to the first round qualifier.
[20][21] Early development of the women's game at the time colonial powers brought football to the continent was limited as colonial powers in the region tended to take make concepts of patriarchy and women's participation in sport with them to local cultures that had similar concepts already embedded in them.
[5] The lack of later development of the national team on a wider international level symptomatic of all African teams is a result of several factors, including limited access to education, poverty amongst women in the wider society, and fundamental inequality present in the society that occasionally allows for female specific human rights abuses.
[22] When quality female football players are developed, they tend to leave for greater opportunities abroad.
[23] Continent wide, funding is also an issue, with most development money coming from FIFA, not the national football association.
Attempting to commercialise the game and make it commercially viable is not the solution, as demonstrated by the current existence of many youth and women's football camps held throughout the continent.
In 1993, this popularity led to the creation of the female run Kenya Women's Football Federation, who organised a national team that represented the country several times in international tournaments between its founding and 1996.
[5] Football is the fourth most popular sport for women in the country, trailing behind volley, basketball and field hockey.
[7] In 1999, a woman referee from Kenya officiated a match between the Nigerian and South African women's teams in Johannesburg and was treated poorly by fans when she failed to call an offsides.
FIFA announced that the suspension would be in force until the federation complies with the agreements previously reached.
[4] COSAFA and FIFA reaffirmed a commitment to women's football in the East African countries of Kenya, Ethiopia, Uganda and Tanzania in 2010.
[32][33] The under-20 national team competed in the 2010/2011 FIFA U-20 CAF Women's World Cup qualifying competition.
In the African qualification tournament for the U20 World Cup, Zambia lost to Kenya by an aggregate of 5–2 from the two matches, one home and away for both teams.
They changed most of the players who we played with in Zambia and that made it very hard for us in the midfield which failed to click."
Botswana beat them in the opening round in a walkover win after Kenya withdrew from the tournament.
[39][40] The women's U-17 team competed in the CAF qualifiers for the FIFA U-17 World Cup that will be held in Azerbaijan in September 2012.
Win Draw Lose Void or postponed Fixture As of April 2021 PRE Preliminary squad (Players are listed within position group by order of latest call-up, caps, and then alphabetically)
The following table shows Kenya's all-time official international record per opponent: Notes Citations