Iran's Rouhani pledges women to get access to stadiums: FIFA chief
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[March 02, 2018]
By Brian Homewood
ZURICH (Reuters) - FIFA President
Gianni Infantino said on Friday he had told by Iranian President
Hassan Rouhani that there are plans to allow women to attend
football matches in the country soon.
Infantino said he met Rouhani during a visit to Tehran on Thursday
where he also attended a derby between Esteghlal and Persepolis, one
of the top fixtures in the Iranian season.
"I was promised that women in Iran will have access to football
stadiums soon," he said during an event at FIFA headquarters in
Zurich. "He told me that in countries such as (Iran), these things
take a bit of time."
The Iranian group OpenStadiums, which is campaigning for the right
of women to attend sports fixtures in the Islamic Republic, said
that some women were arrested near Azadi stadium on Thursday during
the Esteghlal-Persepolis match.
"When Mr. Infantino was enjoying a football match in men-only
stadium, Iranian female football fans were under arrest," the group
said on Twitter.
The semi-official Iranian students news agency ISNA quoted Interior
Ministry spokesman Salman Samani as saying the female fans were not
arrested but rather transferred to a "proper place" by police.
Infantino said he was aware of criticism of his visit but felt it
was better to engage in dialogue with Iranian leaders.
"I heard there were some incidents where some women were detained
because they wanted to attend a football match and there was some
criticism, obviously and rightly," he said.
"There are two ways to deal with this matter - either we criticize,
we sanction, we condemn, we don't speak and we cut relations. Or we
go there and have a discussion and try to convince the leaders of
the country that they should give (women) access to stadiums. I went
for the second option."
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FIFA President Gianni Infantino talks to the media after a meeting
at the Elysee Palace in Paris, France, February 21, 2018.
REUTERS/Stephane Mahe
There was no immediate Iranian comment on Infantino's remarks.
Rouhani's office denied reports on Thursday that the ban on women
attending matches had already been lifted.
OpenStadiums said a similar promise over female access had been made
in 2013 to Infantino's predecessor Sepp Blatter.
Rouhani, a pragmatist, has repeatedly criticized the ban but has
been unable to get it removed because of resistance from powerful
hardliners in the clerical and security establishment.
The Islamic Republic has long barred women from attending male
soccer matches, based at least partly on the theory that women
should not hear male fans swear and curse. Iranian women are allowed
to attend female football matches.
(Additional reporting by Parisa Hafezi in Ankara; writing by Brian
Homewood in Zurich; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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