Fans brace for politically charged U.S.-Iran match at World Cup
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[November 29, 2022]
By Maya Gebeily and Charlotte Bruneau
DOHA (Reuters) -Diplomatic foes the United States and Iran face off
on the pitch at the World Cup on Tuesday in a match that some
Iranians fear may see further run-ins with stadium security or
clashes with pro-government fans over raging protests back home.
The contest between the two nations that severed ties over 40 years
ago will be held with increased security to prevent a flare up of
tensions over the unrest that has gripped Iran since the death in
custody of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini on Sept. 16.
In a show of solidarity ahead of the match, which starts at 1900
GMT, the U.S. Soccer Federation temporarily displayed Iran's
national flag without the emblem of the Islamic Republic, leading
Tehran to complain to FIFA, according to state media.
Qatar, which has strong ties with Washington and friendly relations
with Tehran, has staked its reputation on delivering a smooth World
Cup, beefing up security at Iran games and banning some items deemed
inflammatory, like Iran's pre-Revolution flag.
Iran's top nuclear negotiator Ali Bagheri Kani arrived in Doha on
Tuesday on an invitation from Qatar, state news agency IRNA reported
without mentioning if he would attend the match.
U.S.-Iranian ties have been especially strained since then-President
Donald Trump abandoned Tehran's nuclear deal with world powers.
Efforts to salvage the pact under President Joe Biden's
administration have stalled.
Politics have spilled into the World Cup, the first
to be held in a Middle East country.
Security teams deployed on Friday when Iran beat Wales to "break up
a small number of altercations" between Iranian fans outside the
stadium, a Qatari official said, adding the incidents were handled
"swiftly" to contain tensions.
"I will not attend the game on Tuesday since I do not feel safe in
Qatar," said Iranian-Canadian Azi, declining to give her last name
and who was wearing a T-shirt declaring 'Women, Life, Freedom' - a
slogan of the Iran protests.
"Qatar is conducting the same censorship system as what is going on
in Iran ... Also FIFA is to take the blame," she told Reuters about
being stopped by stadium security for her attire.
Hila Yadegar, 37, plans to be at the match to show support for
protesters even though she and her husband were both briefly held by
stadium guards at the Iran-Wales match and despite voicing similar
unease over security in Qatar.
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Weston McKennie of the U.S. during training REUTERS/Amr Abdallah
Dalsh
"I put a chair behind our room in
the hotel even though it was locked," said Yadegar, who works in a
hospital in Canada.
IRAN TEAM FACES PRESSURE
The Qatar official, when asked about security concerns and
complaints over restrictions, said authorities would ensure all
matches are "safe and welcoming for all spectators".
Items that "could increase tensions and risk the safety of fans"
would not be permitted at stadiums, the official said.
Gulf Arab monarchies, including Qatar, do not tolerate domestic
dissent and protests are rare in the region.
Under pressure to publicly support protesters at home, the Iran team
declined to sing the national anthem in their first game against
England, which they lost 6-2. But they sang the anthem ahead of
their second match, a 2-0 win over Wales.
After Friday's victory an Iranian fan in a T-shirt with an image of
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and Qassem Soleimani - a top
Iranian general killed by a U.S. drone strike in 2020 - chanted over
fans voicing support for protesters.
The unrest in Iran poses one of the boldest challenges to the
theocracy since the 1979 Islamic Revolution. Washington has imposed
sanctions on Iranian officials over the deadly crackdown on
protests.
The United States and Iran severed formal relations in 1980 after
the Revolution and ties were hostile when their soccer teams clashed
in the 1998 World Cup. Iran emerged with a 2-1 victory in a game
dubbed the "mother of all football matches".
(Reporting by Maya Gebeily and Charlotte Bruneau; Additional
reporting by Elwely Elwelly in Dubai; Writing by Ghaida Ghantous;
Editing by Peter Rutherford, William Maclean)
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