The Jerusalem Post

Iranian athletes in exile call on IOC to suspend Tehran

- • By BENJAMIN WEINTHAL

The executive manager of United for Navid, an Iranian-run sports organizati­on advancing the human rights of its athletes, filed a formal letter of protest this past week with the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, arguing that the Islamic Republic should be suspended from the IOC because Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei urged discrimina­tion against Israeli athletes.

Sardar Pashaei, a former coach of Iran’s Greco-Roman wrestling team, wrote to IOC President Thomas Bach that a video of Khamenei’s anti-Israel speech is “further proof [of] Iran’s grievous violations of the Olympic and Paralympic charters.”

Attached to the letter was a video of Khamenei from September 17, in which he meets with Iranian Olympic and Paralympic athletes who won medals at the Tokyo Olympics.

Pashaei wrote: “As you can see, the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Republic once again firmly instructs Iranian athletes, as well as Iranian sports officials, that they are forbidden from competing or interactin­g in any way with athletes from the so-called ‘Israeli criminal regime.’”

“The Supreme Leader also instructs senior Iranian sports officials to support non-Iranian athletes from other countries who refuse to compete with Israeli athletes, including an Algerian athlete who refused to compete with an Israeli athlete at the Tokyo Olympics.”

Pashaei, a Greco-Roman wrestler who won a world championsh­ip, said: “The Iranian leader further tells the athletes that the illegitima­te Israeli regime wants to gain legitimacy by participat­ing in internatio­nal competitio­ns and that Israeli athletes should not be allowed to compete and win medals. This is a clear example of political interferen­ce in sports by the highest-ranking official of the Iranian government and is in direct violation of the Olympic and Paralympic charters.”

United for Navid is named after the murdered champion Greco-Roman wrestler Navid Afkari, who made internatio­nal headlines last year prior to his execution by Iran’s regime because he protested against

Khamenei’s corruption.

Pashaei, who currently lives in the US, noted that, “as previously reported in separate letters regarding the sacrifice of Iranian athletes for not being allowed to compete with Israeli athletes, we again formally request that as long as Iran pursues such policies, which are systematic violations of the Olympic and Paralympic charters, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee suspend Iran from internatio­nal competitio­n and undertake an official investigat­ion into the current state of Iranian sports.”

Sheina Vojoudi, an Iranian dissident who fled the Islamic Republic, told The Jerusalem Post that “Khamenei is injecting his lethal ideology into sports and he’s oppressing Iranian athletes – who train for a lifetime to participat­e in the Olympics to have a fair competitio­n with other athletes from all around the world – to give up their efforts and dreams for his dangerous and genocidal ideology. Ali Khamenei is ruining lives and dreams for his hatred towards Jewish people and the Jewish State of Israel.”

Vojoudi, who is well versed in Iranian wrestling and the country’s top grappling stars, added: “Iranian athletes won’t have any problem with facing Israeli athletes, but the inhuman rules of the Islamic Republic put their lives in jeopardy. They have only three options when it comes to competing with Israeli athletes: They can refuse it and lose their dream of winning an Olympic medal; they can compete and flee the country; [or] they can compete and go back to Iran and face the consequenc­es which cost them their whole life and also imprisonme­nt.

“This is a violation of human rights and the Olympic Charter,” she said. “The regime in Iran doesn’t care about Iranian athletes. Iranian female athletes are suffering from [having to wear] compulsory hijab in the competitio­ns. They don’t even believe in hijab, like most Iranian women, but they are forced to have it against their own free will.”

Bach has shown no appetite to punish Iran’s regime for its antisemiti­sm, or to sanction Tehran’s rulers for their widely reported extrajudic­ial killing of Afkari.

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