The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Iran women debate if biggest football attendance spells victory

-

TEHRAN: Iranian reporter Hedieh Khatibi says she had to pinch herself when she finally got to enter Tehran’s Azadi stadium late Saturday to cover a football match there for the first time.

“It was a dream come true at last, I didn’t know whether to laugh or cry,” the journalist for sports newspaper Goal told AFP.

“At any moment I was worried someone would come and tell me to leave.”

As Khatibi took her place in the press box, around a thousand female fans were also packed into the arena to watch local giant Persepolis FC battle it out in the Asian Champions League with Japan’s Kashima Antlers.

The turnout was the biggest allowed to women in Iran in nearly four decades and, despite the home team losing on aggregate, little could dampen their spirits.

“When the women arrived, all the men stood up and applauded them,” Khatibi said.

“It was so moving, 80,000 Iranian men were on their feet in respect and support of Iranian women.”

Reformist papers in the Islamic republic hailed their attendance as a clear victory for women in the country.

Gianni Infantino, head of world football’s governing body FIFA who attended the match, welcomed it as “a historic and festive day for football, a real breakthrou­gh”.

But not everyone appeared so convinced that it was a genuine triumph.

The game was not open to all women who wanted to attend.

Khatibi said that only “handpicked” people whose names appeared on pre-prepared lists were allowed into the stadium.

The reformist Sazandegi newspaper reported those selected included relatives of the home side as well as football and futsal players.

The women who were allowed in were seated in a separate stand and entered the stadium through a different route to the men.

Sahar Tolouee, a veteran journalist at the reformist Shargh newspaper, said she was offered the chance to attend, but refused to be on a list as she found it “insulting”.

“To put you on a list like it’s a gift when it’s my right, and the right of all women to go to stadiums and watch football matches, is just unacceptab­le,” the lifelong Persepolis FC fan told AFP.

“The doors of stadiums are still closed on Iranian women as a whole, they were just opened on a select few for one day.”

Following the 1979 Islamic revolution, women were banned from attending men’s football matches in Iran.

The first time women attended after the ban was on November 15, 2001 when some 20 Irish women were allowed to watch the IranIrelan­d World Cup qualifier.

Iranian women had to wait four more years, until June 8, 2005 when a few dozen were allowed to watch the Iran-Bahrain World Cup qualifier. - AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia