Ahmed, 31, was this week granted citizenship and could now feature in Australia's effort to reclaim the Ashes, starting in Nottingham on Thursday.
The cricketer opened up about his experiences in an interview published Saturday about how he was forced to flee in 2009 after receiving death threats from extremists in his native Pakistan for his perceived promotion of Western values, and for helping an NGO that championed women's education, health and vaccinations.
"They terrorised me, they made death threats to me. They don't like to educate women. They want the people in the dark so that they can dominate them easily."
He said the atmosphere had deteriorated in Pakistan's North West Frontier Province, near the Afghanistan border, where he lived with his family, since the September 11 attacks in the United States in 2001.
"Things are going from worse to worse, especially in the past five or six years," Ahmed said.
He said when he began a professional cricket career at age 23 with Abbottabad and began to coach women cricketers he started receiving threats.
"The terrorists would come straight to my face and say, 'Step down from what you are doing otherwise you will see a serious problem later on'," he said.
"I got an opportunity to play for my state in Islamabad, but they still keep following me, keep threatening me, texting me and saying, 'You are still helping those people and when we find you we will seriously harm you'.
