Iran’s football association has been blasted for being ‘unethical’ after it is claimed eight players in women’s national team are men awaiting sex change operations
Mojtabi Sharifi, an official close to the Iranian league, told an Iranian news website: “[Eight players] have been playing with Iran’s female team without completing sex change operations.”
On Wednesday, authorities reportedly ordered gender testing of the entire national squad and leading league players. The names of the players thought to be male were not revealed. The Iranian women’s team play in hijab headscarfs, long-sleeved tops and tracksuit bottoms.
In 2014, the country’s football governing body introduced random checks after it was revealed that four national team players were either men who had not completed sex change operations, or were suffering from sexual development disorders. In 2010, doubts were raised about the gender of the team’s goalkeeper also.
Gender change operations are legal in Iran according to a fatwa – or religious ruling – pronounced by the late Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, spiritual leader of the 1979 Islamic revolution.
Football is highly popular among many Iranian women, despite religious rules that bar them from entering stadiums to watch matches between male teams.