Iranian women's team set to leave for Oman
Iranian women's football team captain Zahra Ghanbari (R) arrives with other members of her team at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Sepang on March 16, 2026, after staying in a hotel in the Malaysian capital while awaiting the next leg of their journey home. Three more members of the Iranian women's football team have left their asylum in Australia and decided to return home, Canberra said on March 15.
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The Iranian
women's football team will depart from Malaysia on Monday on a flight bound for
Oman, a top Asian football official confirmed, after more team members withdrew
their asylum bid in Australia.
The team arrived
at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport shortly before 5.00 pm (0900 GMT).
Dressed in their
national colours, players disembarked from a tour bus before heading towards
the check-in at the airport.
Earlier in the
day, the team slipped past reporters when leaving their hotel in the Malaysian
capital, where they have been avoiding media since Wednesday.
Most team
members declined to speak to reporters, but one member told AFP "I am
missing my family."
Windsor John,
general secretary of the Asian Football Confederation, told AFP the Iranian
team "informed us that they will be flying to Oman, but that's not their
final destination."
"They will
be in Oman probably until they find flights to their next destination,"
Windsor said.
A source, who
wished to remain anonymous, told AFP that the team was likely to travel from
Oman to Istanbul, before going to the eastern Turkish city of Van and heading
into Iran.
Among the
players at the airport was Zahra Ghanbari, who withdrew her bid for asylum on
Sunday, making her the fifth member of the delegation to change their mind.
A former player
and a Persian-language TV channel based outside Iran said the players had been
pressured to reverse their stance through threats against families back home.
But Iranian
authorities have in turn accused Australia of pressuring the players to stay.
Three players
and one backroom staff member had already in previous days withdrawn their bids
for asylum and travelled to Malaysia.
Seven members of
Iran's visiting football delegation competing in the Women's Asian Cup had
initially sought sanctuary in Australia after they were branded
"traitors" at home for refusing to sing the national anthem.
The football
drama has unfolded against a backdrop of war in the Middle East unleashed by
US-Israeli air strikes on Iran, which also followed protests against the
clerical system that peaked in January.
Following the
captain's reported move to go back on her asylum request, only two of the team
members are now set to remain in Australia.


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