<p>One of Bangladesh's top women cricketers has hit critics for six after being accused of disrespecting national culture by posing for photos in full wedding attire... and a bat.</p>.<p>Pictures of Sanjida Islam wielding a cricket bat while dressed in an orange sari and wearing dozens of bangles went viral after she posted them on social media last week.</p>.<p>The International Cricket Council -- the sport's governing body -- retweeted the pictures to hundreds of thousands of worldwide followers with a tick against a wedding-ceremony checklist reading: "Dress, jewellery, cricket bat."</p>.<p>But some in her Muslim-majority home country said she had gone too far.</p>.<p>"There is nothing in her that an Islamic society can follow," said one on Facebook.</p>.<p>Others called for "strict punishment".</p>.<p>Most people, however, loved the impromptu photoshoot.</p>.<p>"I did not plan to pose with a bat," said Sanjida, who went to the stadium with groom Mim Mosaddeak -- who plays for Rangpur in the Bangladesh championship -- the day before their formal vows.</p>.<p>"I saw some kids playing; I just could not resist ... my teammates captured the moment beautifully.</p>.<p>"I shared the photos casually on Facebook and Instagram. I had no idea they would go viral," she told AFP.</p>.<p>Fans of Sanjida, who has played 16 one-day internationals and 54 Twenty20 internationals for Bangladesh, agreed with the star cricketer.</p>.<p>"This photo reflects true progressive Bangladesh," said one on social media.</p>
<p>One of Bangladesh's top women cricketers has hit critics for six after being accused of disrespecting national culture by posing for photos in full wedding attire... and a bat.</p>.<p>Pictures of Sanjida Islam wielding a cricket bat while dressed in an orange sari and wearing dozens of bangles went viral after she posted them on social media last week.</p>.<p>The International Cricket Council -- the sport's governing body -- retweeted the pictures to hundreds of thousands of worldwide followers with a tick against a wedding-ceremony checklist reading: "Dress, jewellery, cricket bat."</p>.<p>But some in her Muslim-majority home country said she had gone too far.</p>.<p>"There is nothing in her that an Islamic society can follow," said one on Facebook.</p>.<p>Others called for "strict punishment".</p>.<p>Most people, however, loved the impromptu photoshoot.</p>.<p>"I did not plan to pose with a bat," said Sanjida, who went to the stadium with groom Mim Mosaddeak -- who plays for Rangpur in the Bangladesh championship -- the day before their formal vows.</p>.<p>"I saw some kids playing; I just could not resist ... my teammates captured the moment beautifully.</p>.<p>"I shared the photos casually on Facebook and Instagram. I had no idea they would go viral," she told AFP.</p>.<p>Fans of Sanjida, who has played 16 one-day internationals and 54 Twenty20 internationals for Bangladesh, agreed with the star cricketer.</p>.<p>"This photo reflects true progressive Bangladesh," said one on social media.</p>