Iran’s football stars have taken a stand on the eve of the FIFA World Cup as protests erupted following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini on September 16.
Before an international friendly against Senegal, which ended in a 1-all draw, Iran’s players caused a stir across the football world when the side lined up for the national anthem wearing black jackets over their mostly white kits.
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Protests have erupted in Iran with social media posts that mysteriously disappear, the anthem blackout and former legends weighing in following the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini following her arrest by the notorious morality police have raised uncomfortable questions for the team, who are hugely influential in a football-mad country.
Iran are preparing to battle in a competitive and also politically loaded Group B in Qatar, where they will face the United States, England and Wales in a bid to reach the knockout rounds for the first time.
There has been immense scrutiny of the team’s star forward Sardar Azmoun, who plays in the German Bundesliga for Bayer Leverkusen.
He initially appeared to allege a gag order on the team speaking out and condemning the authorities’ deadly crackdown but he then stepped back.
Meanwhile, one of the biggest names in Iranian football, former national team star Ali Karimi, has become a hero for many of the protesters in Iran by vociferously supporting the protests on social media — in defiance of bitter criticism in pro-government media.
Echoes of the protests reached Iran’s pre-World Cup friendly match against Senegal in Vienna on Tuesday, when protesters outside the stadium shouted slogans against the Islamic republic and chanted the names of Karimi and Azmoun.
“We are here to just beg (the team): please support us instead of standing against us. Please support us,” Mehran Mostaed said, one of the organisers of the protest.
“Sure there are consequences for a football player to express support, because the consequences in Iran for the people who are against the regime are really high. But for sure they have to face the consequences.”
Azmoun began the game on the bench, fuelling rumours he may have been sidelined. But he appeared in the second half, and scored with a neatly taken header to the pleasure of Iran’s newly rehired Portuguese coach Carlos Queiroz.
Azmoun’s celebrations were muted and the entire team had remained wrapped in their black tracksuits during the anthems rather than exposing the national strip.
Earlier in the week, Iranian football bloggers took screenshots of an Instagram post from Azmoun saying that because of “restrictive rules on the Team Melli, I could not say anything”.
But he added that he could not stay silent due to the crackdown against the protests that activists say has killed over 75 people.
“This will never be erased from our consciousness. Shame on you!” he wrote. The post was deleted and the entire content of the Instagram account, followed by some five million people, disappeared for days.
Azmoun’s German club also backed him. Its official Twitter account quoted director Simon Rolfes as saying. “Of course we support Sardar’s solidarity with the women of Iran.”
After the Senegal match, Azmoun’s Instagram account was restored, and he appeared to apologise for his earlier post.
“There was no pressure on me to write or delete an Instagram story,” he said, adding that “there is no division in the Team Melli”.
“I apologise to my friends in the national team because my hasty action caused bloggers to insult my teammates and disturb the peace and order within the team,” he wrote.
With the team’s pre-World Cup friendlies now completed, some players took a more outspoken stance on social media with Majid Hosseini, who plays for Kayserispor in Turkey, reposting a message calling on the police to put down their guns.
Fellow international Saeid Ezatolahi also expressed solidarity in an Instagram story, urging authorities to “listen to the people of our country”.
Many activists want a strong political stance from the team ahead of the World Cup, recalling how players famously wore green wristbands in 2009 in support of the so-called Green Movement that erupted after disputed elections.
One of the players on the field back then, Karimi, has repeatedly posted on Instagram and on Twitter in support of the protests and condemning the death of Amini, saying not even holy water could “wash away this disgrace”.
“Like the common people of my land, I am not looking for any post or position,” he said.
“I am only looking for peace and comfort and welfare of people in all parts of my country.” These posts prompted the Fars news agency in Iran to publish a piece calling for his arrest, while there have been suggestions property he owns in Iran could be impounded.
Other top former players have echoed his stance in Instagram posts. Mehdi Mahdavikia, for years a feature in the Bundesliga, accused the authorities of “alienating and ignoring the people”.
Ali Daei, a legendary striker and 1998 World Cup star, told the regime to “solve the problems of the Iranian people rather than using repression, violence and arrests”.