FIFA boss hopeful Iran will lift stadium ban on women football fans

In Iran, women are not allowed to watch men's football matches in stadiums, though they have occasionally been allowed to watch volleyball and basketball in stadiums.

Female Iranian spectators cheer during a friendly football match between Iran and Bolivia at the Azadi (Freedom) stadium in Tehran, Iran on October 16, 2018.
AP

Female Iranian spectators cheer during a friendly football match between Iran and Bolivia at the Azadi (Freedom) stadium in Tehran, Iran on October 16, 2018.

FIFA president Gianni Infantino has raised hopes that Iran will lift a ban on women entering football stadiums before a World Cup qualifying game next month.

Attention on the ban intensified when a 29-year-old activist, Sahar Khodayari, died this month after setting herself on fire outside a courthouse. She had been detained for dressing as a man to enter a football stadium and believed she faced six months in prison.

Infantino said in a statement Thursday "now is the moment to change things and FIFA is expecting positive developments starting in the next Iran home match."

Iran, the top-ranked team in Asia, hosts Cambodia at the 78,000-capacity Azadi Stadium in Tehran on October 10.

Infantino has been urging Iran's government to lift the 40-year ban imposed after the Islamic Revolution.

FIFA's statutes prohibit discrimination by member federations and could allow for Iran to be suspended from international football.

"Our position is clear and firm. Women have to be allowed into football stadiums in Iran," said the FIFA president, who previously got assurances at a March 2018 meeting with Iran's President Hassan Rouhani.

Iran briefly relaxed its rule last November when hundreds of women were selected to attend the Tehran stadium for the Asian Champions League final second leg game.

Infantino's latest attempt to put pressure on Iran did not impress the Open Stadiums women's group which is campaigning to end the ban.

"This is even softer than the previous letter to Iran and still is talking only about World Cup qualification matches," the group said on its Twitter account. "Sahar's death and activists in danger didn't change FIFA's action, they need process and steps for any actions!"

Open Stadiums noted this week that judo's world governing body has suspended Iran's national judo federation for government interference. 

Iranian athletes are typically prevented from competing against opponents from Israel. The president of Iran's judo federation, Arash Miresmaeili, called the suspension "hasty and unfair," semi-official Mehr news agency reported Wednesday.

FIFA has officials currently in Iran monitoring preparations at the venue should the football ban be lifted.

"We understand there are steps and processes that need to be taken before this is done in a proper and safe way," Infantino said.

Route 6