Accessibility links

Breaking News

After 38 Years, Iranian Women Allowed to Attend Soccer Match

update

Iranian women cheer during a soccer match between their national team and Cambodia in the 2022 World Cup qualifier, Oct. 10, 2019.
Iranian women cheer during a soccer match between their national team and Cambodia in the 2022 World Cup qualifier, Oct. 10, 2019.

For the first time in 38 years, Iranian women Thursday were able to enter a stadium by buying their own tickets to watch a men’s soccer match between their national team and Cambodia.

Videos and photos published on social media by soccer fans show women are entering Tehran’s Azadi Stadium. Authorities designated a special section for women which is isolated by fences. Out of 36 sections of Azadi Stadium, only four were allocated to women.

After the establishment of the Islamic Republic in 1979, Iran’s clerical rulers banned women from watching men’s sports in stadiums. After years of criticism and protests, the government in September finally relented to official demands from FIFA, soccer's ruling body, which threatened to suspend Iran from international tournaments.

The conservative clerics and hardliners have always maintained that the atmosphere in sports arenas is "morally unsuitable" for women according to Islamic precept.

“Following several ID checks and inspections by Iran’s morality police, we were finally allowed to enter. They told us that shooting any video showing faces of police personnel is prohibited. They have also warned us about foreign reporters,” a woman who entered the stadium told Radio Farda.

The last time women could buy tickets for a soccer match under the rules of the Islamic Republic was on Oct. 9, 1981. The ban on women was never enacted as a law but enforced by executive decisions.

The death of a young woman who committed suicide after being threatened with a jail term turned into an international story, which prompted FIFA to increase its pressure on Iran.

Sahar Khodayari, a female soccer fan tried to enter Tehran’s Azadi stadium to watch a match when she was arrested. She was released later but in early September she was told of an impending jail term. She set herself on fire and died a few days later in the hospital, creating international outrage.

Last week, women were allowed to go online to buy tickets for the game between Iran and Cambodia.

XS
SM
MD
LG