News

Iranian Women Can Finally Attend Sports Events

by Clarissa-Jan Lim

As if timed to coincide with the announcement of a breakthrough in nuclear negotiations, Iran will allow women to attend stadium sporting events as officials agree to relax the ban on female presence at sports games across the country. Although there is no set date to implement the restriction ease, Iranian Deputy Sports Minister for Culture, Education and Research Abdolhamid Ahmadi told PressTV on Saturday that it would come sometime during the Iranian calendar year, which began on March 21.

A Ministry of Youth Affairs and Sports official reportedly told the state-run media, Islamic Republic News Agency, that the loosening of the ban extended to most sporting events for women and families, except those considered “masculine," such as wrestling or swimming where male athletes wear uniforms or suits that expose most of their bodies.

However, gender separation within the stadiums is to be expected in the conservative Muslim state — women are likely to be seated at specially designated areas in sporting stadiums, while mixed seating will be extended to families. The New York Times reported that many Iranians considered sporting events to be too boisterous and un-Islamic for women, though Ahmadi called for a change:

Stadiums must become family-oriented, and the atmosphere there must be softened, [although women are not interested in some sports,] nor is their attendance possible, because these sports are for men.
ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP/Getty Images

Among those celebrating the news is 26-year-old British-Iranian Ghoncheh Ghavami, who was convicted and jailed last year for trying to attend a men's volleyball match in protest of the ban on women at stadiums. Since pardoned — though a travel ban remains — Ghavami said, of the easing of restrictions:

Although this proposal is likely to be enforced with some limitations in the beginning, fortunately the issue of women demanding to be allowed in stadiums has gained much public support in the country thanks to the efforts of women’s rights activists in the past 10 years. The new government has supported the ban to be lifted but we want to make sure there will be a guarantee women will be allowed to attend all sporting events in future.

If and when implemented, the move will mark a victory for President Hassan Rouhani, whose efforts to liberalize Iran and grant its people more personal freedoms has contributed to his image as a moderate leader who is en route to a historic nuclear deal with world powers following months of harrowing negotiations.

FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images

Iranian women have been banned from attending men's sporting events since hardline religious clerics ascended to power during the Islamic Revolution in 1979. Last year's World Cup, however, saw groups of women and girls protest the ban that extended to cinemas screening the international soccer competition. FIFA President Sepp Blatter last month went so far as to call on Iran to end its ban, which seems as though is — finally — about to happen.

Image: Getty Images (2)