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Thousands Of Women Will At Last Be Allowed To Attend A Soccer Match In Iran

Iranian sports journalist Raha Purbakhsh shows off her ticket to attend a World Cup qualifier in front of Azadi Stadium in Tehran on Tuesday. Iran has essentially banned women from entering the stadium for decades.
Atta Kenare
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AFP via Getty Images
Iranian sports journalist Raha Purbakhsh shows off her ticket to attend a World Cup qualifier in front of Azadi Stadium in Tehran on Tuesday. Iran has essentially banned women from entering the stadium for decades.

For some 40 years, women have been largely banned from attending soccer matches at Iran's stadiums. But under pressure from FIFA, soccer's governing body, Iranian authorities are allowing a few thousand women to watch a game Thursday at Tehran's Azadi Stadium – in a section separate from men.

Women were permitted to buy about 3,500 tickets to watch a World Cup qualifier between the men's teams of Iran and Cambodia.

The change comes after an Iranian woman set herself on fire and died last month, as she faced charges arising from her trying to enter the stadium to watch a match. The woman, 29-year-old soccer fan Sahar Khodayari, had dressed up as a man to try to get into the game. When security guards discerned that she was a woman, she was expelled and charged with "appearing in public without a hijab."

The ban has been in place since 1979's Islamic revolution, with only small groups of women allowed to attend a handful of matches in recent years.

Iranian sports journalist Raha Purbakhsh is among those who got a ticket to Thursday's match. She told news service AFP that she last stepped into Azadi stadium about 25 years ago with her father.

"I still can't believe it's happening because after all these years watching every match on TV, I'm going to be able to experience everything in person," she said. "I'll be able to feel the stands, and closely watch the game itself."

But some say it's not enough. Amnesty International criticized Iran's authorities for allotting so few tickets to women in a stadium that can seat 78,000. It's not clear how many tickets have been made available to men.

"Iran's decision to allow a token number of women into the stadium for tomorrow's football match is a cynical publicity stunt by the authorities intended to whitewash their image following the global outcry over Sahar Khodayari's tragic death," Philip Luther, Amnesty's Middle East and North Africa Research and Advocacy Director, said in a statement.

"Instead of taking half-hearted steps to address their discriminatory treatment of women who want to watch football, the Iranian authorities should lift all restrictions on women attending football matches, including domestic league games, across the country," he said. "The international community, including world football's governing body, FIFA, must also ensure that woman are permitted to attend all matches."

FIFA statutes prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender. The governing body says the arrangement for Thursday's match is a pragmatic solution as it works toward lasting change in Iran.

"It's not just about one match," FIFA's head of social responsibility and education Joyce Cook told the BBC. "We're not going to turn our eyes away from this. We're totally focused on making sure women can attend this match on 10 October and working just as pragmatically to ensure women also can attend local matches in league football - but it's about what follows as well. FIFA has a very firm stand - fans are equally entitled to attend matches."

Iranian Vice President for Parliamentary Affairs Hossein-Ali Amiri said last month that some of the country's stadiums were being prepared for the entry of women, by adding separate gates and seating.

The group Open Stadiums has long campaigned for women's right to watch games in Iran's arenas. The organization's leader, who goes by the pseudonym Sara, told Reuters that many of the women who bought tickets to Thursday's match aren't actually soccer fans.

"[T]hey just want to break this discrimination," she said. "For years [equal stadium access] has been a demand from the women's rights movement in Iran and as a part of exclusion from the public spaces. It's not just about football."

"People are doing this just to show that if you give capacity to us, we will use it."

Copyright 2020 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

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Laurel Wamsley is a reporter for NPR's News Desk. She reports breaking news for NPR's digital coverage, newscasts, and news magazines, as well as occasional features. She was also the lead reporter for NPR's coverage of the 2019 Women's World Cup in France.