Iran detains 35 women for going to football match

DJ Blue

Well-Known Member
Iran has detained 35 women for trying to attend a football match.

They tried to go to a game between Tehran teams Esteqlal and Persepolis. Iran said they were temporarily held and would be released after the match.

Fifa's president, Gianni Infantino, was also in attendance, along with Iranian Sport Minister Masoud Soltanifar.

A live broadcast was taken off the air when a journalist asked Mr Soltanifar when women would be allowed to attend football matches.

According to the semi-official ISNA news agency, Iranian interior ministry spokesman Seyyed Salman Samani said the female football fans were not arrested - but transferred to a "proper place" by police.

Earlier reports said two women were held.

Iran has barred women from attending football games since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.


'Break the taboo'
There were calls on social media before the match for women to protest against the ban outside the Azadi stadium today.

Women's rights activist Masih Alinejad on Wednesday called on women to attend Thursday's match.

"The Fifa president will be in the stadium tomorrow (1 March)," she wrote.

"I wish women would gather outside the stadium to ask men not to enter without them."

Another user said it was a "basic right" for women to enter stadiums with men, and said this match was "the best chance to break the 35-year-old taboo".

Azadi means "freedom" stadium in Persian, and one Twitter user pointed out the hypocrisy of "naming a stadium freedom but banning half the population from entering".

_75306515_line976.jpg

Why this game?
By Alan Johnston, World Service Middle East regional editor

The women caught sneaking into the stadium were trying to attend a particularly significant game, one being watched by the most powerful man in world football, Fifa's boss.

It seems they wanted to attract Mr Infantino's attention to the ban on women attending games.

And the sensitivity of the issue was apparent as Mr Infantino stood beside the country's sports minister during a live TV interview.

A journalist asked this awkward question about when the ban might be lifted. The sound was faded down, and the interview abruptly taken off the air.


Since 2016, when Saudi Arabia broke off relations with Iran, Saudi clubs have refused to play there, forcing Iranian teams to play home games in Oman.

"It's very clear that politics should stay out of football and football should stay out of politics," Mr Infantino said the news conference.

"There are of course political issues between countries all over the world but this should not have an impact," he said.

Later on, the head of Fifa met with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

Mr Rouhani asked Fifa to make sure that "people are not deprived of watching competitions in their own stadiums".




Esteqlal won 1-0
 
Iran has detained 35 women for trying to attend a football match.

They tried to go to a game between Tehran teams Esteqlal and Persepolis. Iran said they were temporarily held and would be released after the match.

Fifa's president, Gianni Infantino, was also in attendance, along with Iranian Sport Minister Masoud Soltanifar.

A live broadcast was taken off the air when a journalist asked Mr Soltanifar when women would be allowed to attend football matches.

According to the semi-official ISNA news agency, Iranian interior ministry spokesman Seyyed Salman Samani said the female football fans were not arrested - but transferred to a "proper place" by police.

Earlier reports said two women were held.

Iran has barred women from attending football games since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.


'Break the taboo'
There were calls on social media before the match for women to protest against the ban outside the Azadi stadium today.

Women's rights activist Masih Alinejad on Wednesday called on women to attend Thursday's match.

"The Fifa president will be in the stadium tomorrow (1 March)," she wrote.

"I wish women would gather outside the stadium to ask men not to enter without them."

Another user said it was a "basic right" for women to enter stadiums with men, and said this match was "the best chance to break the 35-year-old taboo".

Azadi means "freedom" stadium in Persian, and one Twitter user pointed out the hypocrisy of "naming a stadium freedom but banning half the population from entering".

_75306515_line976.jpg

Why this game?
By Alan Johnston, World Service Middle East regional editor

The women caught sneaking into the stadium were trying to attend a particularly significant game, one being watched by the most powerful man in world football, Fifa's boss.

It seems they wanted to attract Mr Infantino's attention to the ban on women attending games.

And the sensitivity of the issue was apparent as Mr Infantino stood beside the country's sports minister during a live TV interview.

A journalist asked this awkward question about when the ban might be lifted. The sound was faded down, and the interview abruptly taken off the air.


Since 2016, when Saudi Arabia broke off relations with Iran, Saudi clubs have refused to play there, forcing Iranian teams to play home games in Oman.

"It's very clear that politics should stay out of football and football should stay out of politics," Mr Infantino said the news conference.

"There are of course political issues between countries all over the world but this should not have an impact," he said.

Later on, the head of Fifa met with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

Mr Rouhani asked Fifa to make sure that "people are not deprived of watching competitions in their own stadiums".




Esteqlal won 1-0
With a name like Infantino, he should never take in a game at the San Giro.
 
Iran has detained 35 women for trying to attend a football match.

They tried to go to a game between Tehran teams Esteqlal and Persepolis. Iran said they were temporarily held and would be released after the match.

Fifa's president, Gianni Infantino, was also in attendance, along with Iranian Sport Minister Masoud Soltanifar.

A live broadcast was taken off the air when a journalist asked Mr Soltanifar when women would be allowed to attend football matches.

According to the semi-official ISNA news agency, Iranian interior ministry spokesman Seyyed Salman Samani said the female football fans were not arrested - but transferred to a "proper place" by police.

Earlier reports said two women were held.

Iran has barred women from attending football games since the Iranian Revolution in 1979.


'Break the taboo'
There were calls on social media before the match for women to protest against the ban outside the Azadi stadium today.

Women's rights activist Masih Alinejad on Wednesday called on women to attend Thursday's match.

"The Fifa president will be in the stadium tomorrow (1 March)," she wrote.

"I wish women would gather outside the stadium to ask men not to enter without them."

Another user said it was a "basic right" for women to enter stadiums with men, and said this match was "the best chance to break the 35-year-old taboo".

Azadi means "freedom" stadium in Persian, and one Twitter user pointed out the hypocrisy of "naming a stadium freedom but banning half the population from entering".

_75306515_line976.jpg

Why this game?
By Alan Johnston, World Service Middle East regional editor

The women caught sneaking into the stadium were trying to attend a particularly significant game, one being watched by the most powerful man in world football, Fifa's boss.

It seems they wanted to attract Mr Infantino's attention to the ban on women attending games.

And the sensitivity of the issue was apparent as Mr Infantino stood beside the country's sports minister during a live TV interview.

A journalist asked this awkward question about when the ban might be lifted. The sound was faded down, and the interview abruptly taken off the air.


Since 2016, when Saudi Arabia broke off relations with Iran, Saudi clubs have refused to play there, forcing Iranian teams to play home games in Oman.

"It's very clear that politics should stay out of football and football should stay out of politics," Mr Infantino said the news conference.

"There are of course political issues between countries all over the world but this should not have an impact," he said.

Later on, the head of Fifa met with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani.

Mr Rouhani asked Fifa to make sure that "people are not deprived of watching competitions in their own stadiums".




Esteqlal won 1-0



Yeah and the SNP under Sturgeon sends trade envoys to Iran begging for business and without a word of criticism, thereby legitimizing and enhancing the regime. Yet she refers to herself as a politician "who doesn't stay silent when faced with misogyny and discrimination." (See speech immediately after Trump win - which I support in deed, not in meaningless words merely playing to the gallery).
 
A story quite similar to the film Offside about a group if teenage girls who dress as boys to gain entry to see Iran v Bahrain in a WC qualifier in 2005, really good film actually
 
I travelled through Iran for 5 weeks a couple of years ago.

Firstly, massive respect to those women who risked a beating (at best) to make a point. The goons in the Basij/IRG are a bunch of cunts.

People lazily writing of Iran and Persian culture forget that this is an ancient, proud and stellar civilization, taken over by a bunch of theocratic hoodlums, bigots and hypocrites. Imagine the UK being run by Ian Paisley, Gerry Adams, and Mad Dogs McGlinchy and Adair and you've got a basic idea of the state of play.

The citizens, especially the women, have to play a constant game with the authorities, for example the headscarf (not a burkah) will be worn just above the eyebrows for a while, then get progessively further back until it is held on by hairspray on a bun on the crown of the head, then the goons will break some heads, arrest some people and we go back to the start. Same with 'western' haircuts and clean shaving for guys.

Iranians are a disapora that have decent numbers in the UK, Canada, the US, France and Switzerland, yet you never hear anything about them, ask yourself why...... if your answer is that they are basically the same as us, love a bevvy, love a dance, are educated, culturally sophisticated and dislike arabs ;-) then you'd be spot on.

The people of Iran live in a nightmare, we have so much to gain from helping them free themselves and take their rightful place as outr allies and friends in the Middle East.
 
Immortal 7

Their tragedy was compounded by three things:

1. Anti US rhetoric post 1979
2. Buying Soviet weapons
3. NOT buying our weapons

Hard to believe we have 'sided' with backward shit holes over a millenia old culture which we have much in common with.
 
Immortal 7

Their tragedy was compounded by three things:

1. Anti US rhetoric post 1979
2. Buying Soviet weapons
3. NOT buying our weapons

Hard to believe we have 'sided' with backward shit holes over a millenia old culture which we have much in common with.

Ruhollah Khomeini was one of the most wicked men of the last century. He's created a state in his image, humourless, oppressive, deeply hated by it's own people with a twisted corrupt shell of an economy, presided over by thugs and conmen with hoors and whiskey stashed in their North Tehran villas.

The only bright spot is that his style of Islamic barbarism has turned an entire generation away from religion. It is difficult to overstate the contempt in which the ruling elites are held in by the local population, sadly the elite have all the guns and an every lasting reservoir of cynicism with which to justify their use.
 
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