Captain of Iranian women’s soccer team is latest to withdraw asylum bid: ‘Family members are missing’

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The captain of Iran’s women’s soccer team has withdrawn her bid for asylum in Australia, making her the latest member to do so as fears grow that the players are being intimidated by Tehran to return home.

Zahra Ghanbari, 34, is “returning to the embrace of the homeland” after withdrawing her asylum bid Sunday, Iran’s IRNA news agency reported.

Seven members of the national Iranian team who took part in the Women’s Asian Cup made headlines last week when they sought sanctuary in Australia amid backlash over their refusal to sing their national anthem at the tournament.

Zahra Ghanbari, the captain of the Iranian women’s national soccer team, has withdrawn her bid for asylum in Australia, state media reported. AP
Five Iranian players, here with Aussie Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke, were the first to seek asylum in Australia. via REUTERS

The women’s display of defiance occurred just as the US and Israel launched air strikes on Iran, killing the Islamic Republic’s longtime Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. 

The women were branded “traitors” in Iran, with their safety put into question should they return home in the wake of Tehran’s brutal crackdown on dissent that killed thousands in January. Their families also are feared to be in the crosshairs of Iran’s brutal leaders over their stand.

After the defecting players caused an international uproar over their situation, with President Trump even offering to have the US take in the women if Australia didn’t grant them asylum, five of the seven women now have opted to return home to the Islamic republic.

The players were branded “traitors” by Iranian state commentators after they refused to sing their country’s national anthem at the Women’s Asian Cup. AP

The players were “given repeated chances to talk about their options” but ultimately faced “incredibly difficult decisions,” Australia Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said in a statement Saturday.

Tina Kordrostami, a councilor for the Australian city of Ryde, claimed the players were being ” heavily intimidated” by Tehran, suggesting their families were being used as leverage to get them back home.

“I know families have even been detained. I know family members are missing,” Kordrostami told Fox News’ “Fox Report With Jon Scott.” 

“One thing I really would like for people in the West to understand is that Iranians within the country have in many ways given up on the West, and they are only relying on one another to survive this regime,” she added.  

“We are very worried about them. We know for a fact that they will not be safe,” she said, referencing claims that the women face severe consequences once they return back home.

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