Two more people connected to Iranian football team choose to stay in Australia
ReutersAustralia has confirmed two more members of the Iranian football group have accepted an offer to stay in the country and will be given humanitarian visas.
The pair – one player and one member of support staff - have now been reunited with the other five players who were granted visas to stay on Tuesday.
They were granted asylum after concerns about the team's safety when they did not sing the national anthem ahead of their match against South Korea last week.
It is understood the remaining Iranian players left Australia on Tuesday night local time - two days after they were knocked out of the Asian Cup.
The pair that remained were separated from the rest of the squad at their hotel on the Gold Coast – after indicating they would like to remain - and taken to a police facility in Brisbane, Immigration Minister Tony Burke said.
All will be fast-tracked to permanent residency, he said.
The offer to stay was reiterated to "most" of the remainder of the delegation at Sydney Airport before they were due to leave the country on Tuesday night, he continued.
Burke said a "very significant" police presence at Sydney Airport ensured players were separated from minders while they talked to officials one-on-one through a translator, and were given the chance to call family.
None of them chose to accept the offer to stay, Burke said, but he added that one person got on the plane "quite late" after conversations with family.
"That individual made their own decision," Burke said – noting that there had been no pressure on them to take the flight.
He added a small number of the travelling group were not invited to stay – thought to be a reference to be Iranian government minders.
"There are some leaving Australia who I am glad are not in Australia," he said.
The team arrived at Sydney Airport from the Gold Coast, where the Asia Cup is being held, on Tuesday evening. Members of the Australian-Iranian community gathered there to support them and to protest against them returning to Iran.
They said some members of the team had signalled for help.
Burke, quoted by the ABC, said Border Force officials had made "multiple representations to the team" before they left Sydney, "including private meetings".
Local media reported that at least one person refused to board their later flight to Malaysia on their way back to Iran.
But some of the players - who were accompanied by chaperones - reportedly told reporters that they wanted to go back to Iran.
Australia's humanitarian visa programme grants permanent protection to refugees and people in humanitarian need. Visa holders can live, work and study in the country.
Reuters/Australian Department of Home AffairsIt is not known what repercussions the team and their families might face in Iran after the players refused to sing the national anthem.
One conservative commentator on Iranian state media accused them of being "wartime traitors" and called for a harsh punishment.
The team did sing the anthem in their last two games before they were eliminated on Sunday, leading critics to believe they had been forced to take part by government officials accompanying them during the tournament as part of the delegation.
Earlier on Tuesday, a bus carrying team members was temporarily blocked by activists as it left their hotel on the Gold Coast. Some carried the Lion and Sun flag, which served as the official state flag before the Islamic revolution in Iran.
Meanwhile, those who had been granted humanitarian visas left the team hotel were moved to a safe location by police.
Burke named them as Fatemeh Pasandideh, Zahra Ghanbari, Zahra Sarbali, Atefeh Ramazanzadeh, and Mona Hamoudi.
Shortly after they left, the BBC witnessed some of their minders running across the hotel to try to find them.
"They want to be clear they are not political activists. They are athletes who want to be safe," Burke said, adding that talks with them had been going on over several days.
Addressing the other team members before they left Australia, he said: "The same opportunity is there. Australia has taken the Iranian women's soccer team into our hearts. These women are tremendously popular in Australia."
EPA/Shutterstock"Australians have been moved by the plight of these brave women," Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told a news conference on Tuesday.
"They're safe here, and they should feel at home here."
The Iranian players' situation has also come to the attention of US President Donald Trump, who took to his Truth Social platform to demand action.
He said Australia should "give asylum" to the women or "the US will take them if you won't."
Around an hour later, Trump posted again to say he had spoken to Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, writing: "five have already been taken care of, and the rest are on their way".
The Trump administration put all asylum decisions on hold at the end of last year, and has stopped issuing immigrant visas for citizens from dozens of countries including Iran. It has said the administration wants to bring "an end to the abuse" of the system.
Last year, two groups of Iranians - including people whose asylum applications had been unsuccessful - were deported from the US back to Iran. The groups reportedly included members of the LGBT community, who face severe legal and social repercussions in Iran.
