HomeAsiaIranian women's soccer team arrive back in Iran after some withdrew asylum...

Iranian women’s soccer team arrive back in Iran after some withdrew asylum claim

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By Ismet Mikailogullari

GURBULAK, Turkey, ‌March 18 (Reuters) - The Iranian women's soccer team crossed the Turkish ​border into Iran on Wednesday to complete a fraught return journey from Australia, after five members withdrew ⁠asylum claims they had lodged there.

Australia had granted humanitarian visas to six players and one support staff member after they sought asylum, saying they feared possible persecution ​if they returned to Iran.

Concerns over their safety surfaced when several players failed to sing the national ‌anthem at a women's Asian Cup match earlier this month after the United States and Israel launched the war against Iran. Iranian state television had labelled them "wartime traitors".

The team, ⁠which flew into Istanbul on Tuesday, took a flight to Igdir ⁠in eastern Turkey on Wednesday morning.

The players emerged from Igdir Airport pulling their luggage and chatted in front of the terminal before boarding a bus to the border. One of them briefly smiled and waved at a TV camera before the bus ‌departed. After a trip of around two hours to the frontier, they went through ⁠passport control at the Gurbulak border gate before crossing ‌over into Iran. 

The team's Asian Cup campaign began just ​as the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. They were eliminated from the tournament more than a week ago.

Five ‌of those who had sought asylum in Australia subsequently ​changed their minds and decided to ⁠return home, with Australian media reporting the latest withdrawal on Monday. 

They ‌rejoined the rest of the squad in Kuala ⁠Lumpur, where the team had been staying since leaving Sydney last week.

The Iranian Football Association (FFIRI) said last week those who had changed their minds would travel home with ​the rest of the team "to ‌once again be embraced by their families and homeland."

Two players are still in Australia ⁠and have been pictured training with a ​local A-League club.  

(Reporting by Ismet Mikailogullari and Ali Kucukgocmen; Writing by Daren Butler; ​Editing by Jonathan Spicer, Alexandra Hudson)

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