Attack on Women Outside Mashhad Stadium with Pepper Spray; “We Were Following Orders from Tehran”

Reports from Mashhad indicate that law enforcement officers used pepper spray in an attempt to disperse women who, despite purchasing tickets to watch the Iran-Lebanon football match, were blocked from entering Mashhad stadium.
This type of treatment toward female football fans on Wednesday drew widespread reaction and condemnation.
While Mashhad’s governor described the violent dispersal of women from outside the stadium as “incidents” and several parliament members held the Ministry of Sports responsible for the event, some political figures speak of “imitating Taliban behavior toward women” in Iran.
Ali Akbar Hashemi Javaheri, director general of the Sports and Youth Department of Razavi Khorasan, stated in this regard: “We and the provincial security council were all obedient and executed orders that came from Tehran. In the final hours, it was decided to be held in this manner.”
On Tuesday evening, April 29th, a large number of women who had legally purchased tickets through the Football Federation website to watch the match were denied entry to the stadium and, in protest, gathered and chanted slogans outside the “Imam Reza” stadium in Mashhad.
Fresh images released by Iranian news agencies including ISNA and videos circulated on social media show that officers resorted to pepper spray to disperse the women, among whom were young girls.
This action sparked a wave of anger on social media, with even some former and current parliament members and Hezbollah supporters protesting it.
Mohsen Davari, Mashhad’s governor, without referring to the use of pepper gas against women, only apologized for what he claimed was selling tickets “beyond the stadium’s capacity,” to people who despite having tickets could not watch the match up close.
Source: Radio Farda




