âSave our girlsâ: Supporters plead for action over Iranian womenâs football team in Australia
âSave our girlsâ: Supporters plead for action over Iranian womenâs football team in Australia
Hilary Whiteman, CNNMon, March 9, 2026 at 7:04 AM UTC
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The Iranian players salute the national anthem before the Women's Asian Cup match with the Philippines at Gold Coast Stadium on March 08 2026. - Matthew Starling/SPP/Sipa USA
After their final defeat in the Asian Womenâs Cup on Sunday, supporters of the Iranian womenâs football team crowded around their bus shouting at police to âsave our girlsâ as it pulled away.
Hadi Karimi, a human rights advocate and member of the local Iranian community, said supporters outside the bus could clearly see at least three players inside making the international hand signal for help.
âWeâre asking federal police, the government, Australian people, everyone. These girls are asking for help. They showing their hand, (the) SOS sign. This is very, very important. Their life is in danger,â he said.
The players, whoâve been in Australia for a week, are at the center of growing calls for their exit from the country to be blocked for fear of persecution in Iran, their home country thatâs at war with the US and Israel under a hardline new supreme leader.
Before their first match last Monday, the players stood silent during the Iranian national anthem, a gesture they didnât explain but one that was interpreted by some hardliners inside Iran as a sign of treason.
A hotel security member stands at the entrance of the hotel, where members of the Iranian women's football team are staying, on the Gold Coast on March 9, 2026. - Patrick Hamilton/AFP/Getty Images
Sources told CNN they were forced to sing the national anthem ahead of their next match on Thursday, and on Sunday, ahead of their final 0-2 defeat to the Philippines, they again sang the anthem and gave a military salute.
The womenâs plight has reached Reza Pahlavi, the son of Iranâs ousted shah, who also joined calls for the Australia government to ensure their safety, warning in a post on X that theyâll face âdire consequencesâ if they return to Iran.
âAs a result of their brave act of civil disobedience in refusing to sing the current regimeâs national anthem, they face dire consequences should they return to Iran,â Pahlavi posted on X. âI call on the Australian government to ensure their safety and give them any and all needed support.â
Defiance then silence
The Iranian womenâs team has been contesting the Womenâs Asian Cup in Australia during a week of turmoil for their country as the conflict with the US and Israel escalates to take in neighboring countries.
The war has disrupted international travel, and while flying to the Middle East right now is difficult due to airspace closures and the risk of airstrikes, supporters fear the women will be taken to a third country â perhaps China, Russia or Malaysia â before an onward journey to the Middle East.
Craig Foster, a former Australian international and human rights advocate, said âa vast range of organizationsâ had tried to speak with the women during their time in Australia but had been denied the opportunity.
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âNo athlete group should ever be effectively held hostage by their own member federation and denied access to external support networks,â he said. He said as the players had been knocked out the competition, the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) had responsibility for their welfare.
âThe first thing that the Australian football community is calling on them is to grant access to the players to safe, culturally appropriate support networks, so that they can privately and confidentially express if they are feeling unsafe and what they would like to see happen,â he said.
CNN has reached out to the AFC and the Iranian Football Federation for comment.
Australian Foreign Minister Penny Wong declined to comment on Sunday, when asked if thereâd been any contact between Australian officials and the Iranian players. She said she didnât want to âget into commentary about the Iranian womenâs team.â
âWe stand in solidarity with the men and women of Iran and particularly Iranian women and girls,â she told national broadcaster, the ABC. âObviously, this is a regime that we know has brutally cracked down on its people.â
At a post-match press conference on Sunday, Iran coach Marziyeh Jafari said the team was keen to return home. âPersonally, I would like to return to my country as soon as possible and be with my compatriots and family,â she said.
Karimi, whoâs also vice president of the Iranian society of Queensland, said supporters gathered outside the playersâ hotel and when they couldnât make contact them due to tight security, they sought help from local Australian police.
They were back there on Monday, keeping watch to see if the bus leaves with the players on board for the airport. âWe want you to separate them from IRGC,â he said, referring to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.
âSeparate them from Islamic regime members, and interview them,â he said.
CNNâs Patrick Sung Cuadrado and Christina Macfarlane contributed reporting.
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Source: âAOL Sportsâ