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In a recent video shared on X by a pro-regime account, Iranian female soccer players are seen looking apprehensive as they return home amidst a controversy surrounding their asylum claims in Australia. The players, dressed in their team tracksuits and Islamic hijabs, appear tense as they walk through lines of people waving the Iranian flag.
The footage captures each player accompanied by a young girl, moving cautiously in the northwest Iranian city of Bazargan. The scene is set to music, adding an emotional layer to their solemn expressions.
Another video from the same account depicts the previous night’s events. It shows the players being warmly welcomed by regime supporters at the border town of Bazargan. This location, about a four-hour drive from the Turkish border, marked their re-entry into Iran.
The return of these athletes is the latest development in an ongoing saga that has gripped Iran’s women’s soccer team. The controversy began when several team members chose not to sing the national anthem during an Asian Cup match, an act that coincided with the onset of Operation Epic Fury.
The Iranian state television branded these athletes as “wartime traitors,” further escalating tensions. Following this, six players and a member of their support staff sought asylum in Australia, adding another layer of complexity to the unfolding drama.
They were labeled “wartime traitors” by Iranian state television, and six players and a support staff member sought asylum in Australia.
They were granted humanitarian visas, before five members suddenly withdrew their asylum claims, amid fears of threats to their loved ones.
The players then rejoined the rest of the squad at their training camp in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, before flying to Istanbul on Tuesday.
They then took a second flight to Igdir in eastern Turkey on Wednesday morning, before crossing back into Iran.
Iran’s soccer authorities said last week that the players who had withdrawn their asylum claims would “once again be embraced by their families and homeland.”
Two of the claimants are still in Australia, where they have been pictured training with a local soccer team.