Skip to main content

Iran Detains 35 Women Attempting to Attend Football Game

Iran Detains 35 Women Attempting to Attend Football Game02 March 2018



Iran Focus

London, 02 Mar - Iran has detained 35 women for attempting to attend a football match on Thursday, March 1.

The match, between Tehran teams Esteqlal and Persepolis at the Azadi (Freedom) stadium, was being attended by FIFA president Gianni Infantino, and Iranian Sport Minister Masoud Soltanifar, which is why women's rights activists called for female football fans to attend.

They believed that this protest against the sexist ban on women attending men’s football games, which has been in place since the mullahs took power in 1979, would have extra prominence with Infantino there and attract the FIFA chief’s attention to the issue.

Women’s rights activists stated that the ban was an infringement of women’s basic rights, mocked the hypocrisy of "naming a stadium freedom but banning half the population from entering", and said the protest was "the best chance to break the [39]-year-old taboo".

Iran’s Response

Seyyed Salman Samani, an Iranian interior ministry spokesman, said that these women were not arrested, but transferred to a "proper place" by police, temporarily held, and released after the match.

However, earlier reports said that two women were held.

When a journalist asked Soltanifar, who was stood next to Infantino, when women would be allowed to attend football matches, their live broadcast was immediately taken off the air.

Previous Incidences

This is far from the first time that Iran has prevented women from attending football matches, even with the eyes of the world on them.

Back in September 2017, women protested outside Azadi Stadium because they were not allowed in to see Iran's World Cup qualifier against Syria, despite having pre-ordered tickets.

One female football fan tweeted: "They did not let us in the stadium, took pictures and videos of us and threatened to arrest us. They then collected our tickets and took them away."

To add insult to injury, female Syrian football fans were allowed in. Some police officers who felt bad for the women, even recommended that the women carry a Syrian flag to try to enter.

These women’s tickets, which has been sold the previous week, were issued by mistake according to Iran's football federation, who offered to refund the tickets.Ghoncheh Ghavami, a British-Iranian woman who was detained for four months after attempting to attend a men's volleyball match in 2015, urged female fans to keep buying tickets for the match in protest at the ban.

She tweeted: "The empty seats will represent our voice.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

WE SHOULD LISTEN CLOSELY TO IRAN Created: 26 January 2018 Iran Maryam Rajavi NCRI PMOI/MEK Human rights Protests United States Opinion JCPOA Paris Middle East Supreme Leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei (Photo by Supreme Leader Press Office / Handout/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images) By Heshmat Alavi As the world continues to debate the recent Iranian outburst of protests, its "lack of leadership" as they claim, and the road ahead, there is no doubt in the minds of senior Iranian regime officials over who led, and continues to lead, this latest uprising that continues to rattle the very pillars of the mullahs' rule.Iran’s Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei made his thoughts crystal clear.“The incidents were organized” and carried out by the Iranian opposition People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (PMOI/MEK), he said although using a different term. “The [MEK] had prepared for this months ago” and “the [MEK’s] media outlets had called for it.” The MEK is best known ...

French FM Visits Iran to Talk Ballistic Missiles and Syria

French FM Visits Iran to Talk Ballistic Missiles and Syria05 March 2018 Iran Focus London, 05 Mar - The French foreign minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, has arrived in Iran to talk with the country's president Hassan Rouhani, Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of Iran's Supreme National Security Council and the Iranian foreign minister Mohammad Javad Zarif, according to Iranian state TV. Talks are expected to focus on Iran’s involvement in the Syrian Civil war and Iran's ballistic missile program, which both Le Drian and French President Emmanuel Macron have criticized Iran's missile program in recent weeks, with Le Drian stating that Iran's ballistic missile capacity worried France “enormously". In response to Iranian claims that their ballistic missile program is peaceful, Le Drian said: "Having such tools is not uniquely defensive, given the distance they can reach." The French Foreign Ministry even issued a statement ahead of the trip, which said Le Drian ...
THE MAGAZINE: From the August 21 Issue Tortured by 'Moderates' Iran's dissidents deserve a hearing AUG 21, 2017 | By KELLY JANE TORRANCE Shabnam Madadzadeh, her brother Farzad, and Arash Mohammadi. Photo credit: KELLY JANE TORRANCE / THE WEEKLY STANDARD Hassan Rouhani was sworn in for his second term as president of Iran on August 5, surrounded by fresh flowers, fervent followers, and around 500 foreign officials. Representatives of the United Kingdom, France, the United Nations, and the Vatican rubbed shoulders with the Syrian prime minister, Hezbollah second-in-command Naim Qassem, Palestinian Islamic Jihad leader and FBI Most Wanted Terrorists list member Ramadan Abdullah Shallah, and murderous Zimbabwean dictator Robert Mugabe. The Westerners didn’t seem uncomfortable in such company; indeed, European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini was described as the star of the show after Iranian members of parliament elbowed through the crowd to take selfies with the...