Australia grants asylum to five Iranian women’s football players after Asian Cup SOS in Brisbane

Five members of Iran’s women’s football team have been granted asylum in Australia after raising fears about their safety if they returned home.

Headshot of Katina Curtis
Katina Curtis
The Nightly
Australia grants five Iranian football players visas.
Australia grants five Iranian football players visas. Credit: Australia Ministry of Home Affairs/AP

Australia has granted asylum to five players on the Iranian women’s football team overnight and says the same offer remains should any other members wish to take it up.

The confirmation of the visas in the early hours of Tuesday morning sparked tears of joy and spontaneous cries of “Aussie Aussie Aussie, oi oi oi”.

A broadcaster working for Iranian state TV last week branded the Lionesses squad “wartime traitors” for not singing the national anthem ahead of their first game of the Asian Cup.

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They sang and saluted for the next two matches.

The events sparked fears among Iranian community advocates and the broader Australian public about the women’s safety on returning to their home country.

Members of the team were spotted signalling “SOS” hand signals from the team bus on the Gold Coast, community sources said.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke said the Government had made it clear to the Iranian delegation that they could seek assistance if they wanted to, and made every effort to give them the opportunity to do so.

He personally welcomed players Fatemeh Pasandideh, Zahra Sarbali Alishah, Atefeh Ramezanizadeh, Mona Hamoudi, and Zahra Ghanbari in Brisbane late on Monday night after the Australian Federal Police helped them move to a safe location.

Home Affairs finalised their visa paperwork at 1.30am AEDT on Tuesday.

“Once everything had been signed off last night, there were lots of photos, lots of celebrating, and then a spontaneous outcry of ‘Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, oi, oi, oi’. These women are great athletes, great people, and they’re going to feel very much at home in Australia,” Mr Burke told reporters early on Tuesday morning.

The players were relieved, Mr Burke said.
The players were relieved, Mr Burke said. Credit: NewsWire
Mr Burke met with the players overnight.
Mr Burke met with the players overnight. Credit: NewsWire

“They wanted to make clear they are not political activists. They’re athletes who want to be safe and are very grateful that Australia is making that opportunity for them.

“These women have been weighing up an incredibly difficult decision.

“I respect that even though the offer continues to be there for other members of the team, it is quite possible and indeed likely that not every woman on the team will make a decision to take up the opportunity that Australia would offer to them.”

Mr Burke spent Sunday night in Brisbane before returning to Canberra on Monday, where the Cabinet’s national security committee met in the afternoon.

He returned to Brisbane on Monday night, as revealed in The West.

The Home Affairs Minister confirmed he checked with ASIO boss Mike Burgess that the intelligence agency had no security concerns about the five women before he offered them Australian visas.

He also spoke with AFP Commissioner Krissy Barrett about security arrangements for the women.

US President Donald Trump also inserted himself into the calls for Australia to help the soccer players, taking to his social media platform Truth Social in the early hours of the morning to accuse Australia of “making a terrible humanitarian mistake by allowing the Iranian Women’s National Soccer team to be forced back to Iran”.

The President then phoned Anthony Albanese at around 2am to discuss the plight of the players, in a conversation the Prime Minister described as lengthy and warm.

“He was concerned about the Iranian women in the soccer team and their welfare and their safety if they returned home. He conveyed that to me. I was able to convey to him the action that we’d undertaken over the previous 48 hours, and that five of the team had asked for assistance and had received it and were safely located,” Mr Albanese said.

“Australians have been moved by the plight of these brave women. They’re safe here and they should feel at home here.”

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