Open letter to Infantino: FIFA to ban Iran

Gianni Infantino, the president of the International Football Union, is now also personally faced with demands that the Iranian Football Union be excluded from the forthcoming World Cup in Qatar. In an open letter sent on Thursday, the Iranian activists of the “Open Stadiums” campaign called “with an extremely heavy heart on the basis of Articles 3 and 4 of the FIFA Statutes” for FIFA to exclude their country’s national team from the tournament.

The activists have been campaigning for women’s right to visit stadiums since 2005, which the FIFA statutes, among other things, oblige their member associations to do. Under the laws of the Islamic Republic, women are banned from attending men’s games, and the ban has so far only been lifted in Tehran’s Azadi Stadium. Since the end of August, women have been allowed to watch games at Esteghlal and Persepolis, having previously been granted access to some of the national team’s home games. However, even there far fewer women than men are granted access, and, as the letter states, they have to undergo “humiliating checks” by the moral guards at the entrances, which amount to “physical assaults”.

Infantino had not only emphasized the role of FIFA in the past few weeks when it came to the – very manageable – progress in the question of stadium access. In fact, the world association had increased the pressure again this year. Before that, however, FIFA had watched the extensive exclusion of women in Iran for four decades without sanctioning Iran.

A report by the London-based portal Iran Wire shows how undesirable the Iranian government – and correspondingly fragile – women’s access to the stadium is: According to this, Ensieh Chazali, the Islamic Republic’s vice-president for women’s politics in the administration of hardliner Ebrahim Raisi, has started September successfully demanded that the spectators in the women’s block in the Azadi Stadium may not be photographed or shown on television in future. The upcoming game day on October 9th and 10th is to take place without any spectators due to the ongoing protests by citizens demanding freedom.

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