The politics of Saudi and Iranian sports
By James M.
Dorsey
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Saudi and
Iranian sports have politics written into their DNA.
Little more
than a decade ago, Saudi Arabia fielded three expatriate
Saudi women athletes
at the 2012 London Olympics to avoid an International Olympic Committee (IOC)
ban on participation.
The IOC had made fielding women athletes a condition for
Saudi male athletes, alongside Qataris and Bruneians, for competing in the
tournament. At the time, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and Brunei were the three countries
that had never included women in their Olympic teams.
Today,
women's sports is a tool in Saudi Arabia’s effort to cement its position as a
global player and leader of the Muslim world, defender of Muslim rights, and
arbitrator of what constitutes ‘moderate’ Islam.
In the
kingdom’s latest move, the Riyadh-based Islamic Solidarity Sports Federation
(ISSF) warned that a ban on French women athletes wearing a hijab, or
headcover, at next year’s Paris Olympics "send(s) a message of exclusion.”
The
Federation groups representatives of 39 Muslim-majority National Olympic Committees
and governmental youth and sports organisations. It is headed by Saudi sports
minister Abdulaziz bin Turki Al Faisal, a member of the kingdom’s ruling family
and former racing driver.
Last week,
the IOC insisted hijabs would be allowed inside the
athletes' village at
next year's Olympics but stopped short of applying the rule to the French
squad.
The IOC said
it was in touch with the French Olympic Committee “to further understand the
situation regarding the French athletes."
Earlier,
French sports minister Amelie Oudea-Castera told France 3 television that no French delegation member would be
allowed to wear the hijab to support France's “strict secularism.”
In a
statement, the ISSF asserted the ban “contradicts the principles of equality,
inclusivity, and respect for cultural diversity that the Olympics stand for.
The hijab is an aspect of many Muslim women’s identity and should be respected.”
The ISSF
said, "This ban not only infringes upon the religious freedom of French
Muslim athletes but could also deny them the opportunity to participate in the
Olympics, representing their country and inspiring others."
The Olympic
ban follows the August banning of the abaya, or women's whole body cover, in
French schools.
By defending
a Muslim majority view in favour of a woman's right to wear a hijab, Saudi
Arabia, a dominant force in the ISSF, brandishes its religious credentials at a
time when it has lifted several restrictions on women in the kingdom, including
in sports, eased gender segregation, sought to reduce the role of religion in
public life, and introduced Western-style entertainment.
It also
comes as many suspect Saudi Arabia may compromise on Palestinian rights as part
of a US-led effort to get the kingdom to recognize Israel. In a first, two Israeli ministers visited Saudi
Arabia in the last
week to attend international conferences.
Politics
also loomed large when Saudi club Al-Ittihad FC refused this week to play an Asian
Champions League match in Isfahan against Iran's Sepahan because of busts of controversial
assassinated Iranian military commander Qasem Soleimani at the entrance to the
pitch.
Iranian
media reported that the busts had been in place for three years and that Al
Ittihad practiced in the stadium earlier this week without making an issue of the
figures.
The match
would have been one of the first since 2016 that Saudi and Iranian clubs would
have played games against one another on home soil.
In a similar
incident in June, Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Faisal bin Farhan, in Tehran
for the first time since Saudi Arabia and Iran reestablished
diplomatic relations, demanded a change of venue for a news conference with his Iranian counterpart because
the initially scheduled room featured a photo of Mr. Soleimani on the wall.
China
mediated the restoration of relations in March. Saudi Arabia severed ties in
2016 after Iranians ransacked Saudi diplomatic missions in protest against the
kingdom’s execution of a prominent Shiite Muslim cleric.
Mr.
Soleimani was killed near Baghdad airport in a United States drone strike in
January 2020. Saudi Arabia had designated as terrorists Mr. Soleimani and his
Al Quds Brigade, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) unit operating
outside Iran.
Iranian
authorities celebrate Mr. Soleimani as a national hero.
Saudi Arabia
asserts the brigade and Mr. Soleimani were involved in Iranian attacks on Gulf
shipping and Saudi oil installations and support Yemen’s Houthi rebels and
Shiite Muslim militias in Lebanon, Syria, and Iraq.
Some 60,000
spectators waited in vain this week in Isfahan’s Naghsh-e Jahn Stadium as
Al-Iitihad refused to leave the dressing room if Mr. Soleimani’s busts remained
in place.
Although
spectators were disappointed at being deprived of the opportunity to see stars
N’Golo Kante and Fabinho play, videos circulating on social media appeared to
show angry Iranian fans chanting that
politics should be kept out of the beautiful game. N’Golo Kante and Fabinho
transferred to Al-Ittihad earlier this year.
Some
postings suggested that Sepahan players applauded the fans.
The Asian
Football Confederation (AFC), the continent’s soccer body, said it was looking
into the incident. The AFC could penalize both clubs.
Sepahan
could be fined and lose points for putting political symbols in the stadium in
violation of the fictitious assertion by football regulators that sports and
politics are separate, while Al-Ittihad could be punished for refusing to play
a match.
Two weeks
ago, Saudi club Al-Nassr played Iran’s Persepolis in Tehran’s empty Azadi
Stadium after the AFC imposed a one-game spectator ban because of fan behaviour.
The Isfahan stadium
protest follows a crackdown on months of protests sparked a year ago by the death of
22-year-old Mahsa Amini while in Iran’s morality price custody.
Security
forces killed more than 500 protesters and detained 20,000 others, including
footballers, journalists, and film stars.
Seven
protesters were sentenced to death and executed in what the United Nations UN
Special Rapporteur on human rights in Iran Javaid Rehman called "arbitrary, summary and sham
trials marred by torture allegations."
This week’s hospitalisation of a 16-year-old girl
in Tehran has put
Iran back on edge. Activists alleged the girl was beaten on a train into a coma
by the morality police for not complying with Iran’s mandatory hijab rules.
State-run
media asserted the girl had fainted because her blood pressure dropped and had
hit the side of the train carriage.
Al-Iitihad’s
refusal to play Sepahan highlights limits to Saudi Arabia and Iran’s
rapprochement. The two countries seek to cooperate on economic and other issues
without attempting to resolve fundamental differences symbolized by Mr.
Soleimani’s legacy.
Mr.
Soleimani’s bust sent a message that Iran was unlikely to modify policies bitterly
opposed by Saudi Arabia as a result of the restoration of diplomatic relations.
These policies include Iran’s support for militias in various Arab countries
and its nuclear and ballistic missile programmes.
As a result,
the Al-Ittihad incident casts a shadow over Saudi and Iranian efforts to manage
their differences to prevent them from spinning out of control.
Relations
could further sour if the kingdom concludes a legally binding security deal
with the United States as part of an agreement involving Saudi recognition of
Israel.
Iranian
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told Muslim ambassadors this week that
normalisation of relations with Israel amounted to "gambling"
that was "doomed to failure."
He warned
that countries that establish relations with the Jewish state would be “in harm’s
way.”
Also
addressing the gathering, Foreign Minister Hossein Amir-Abdollahian added, "We
do welcome the new page in ties with our regional brothers, yet we should also
… move decisively to reject the Zionist regime's legitimacy and forgo
normalization with it."
Al-Ittihad’s
refusal, on the one hand, highlights the fragility of the Saudi-Iranian
rapprochement.
On the other
hand, like the support for French Muslim women athletes, it reinforces the
kingdom’s positioning as an authoritarian yet socially more liberal and
moderate Muslim power opposed to religious militancy, including Iran’s brand of
aggressive militant Islam.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary Fellow at
Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and
the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The
Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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