Iran's National Soccer Team is set to play in the second match of this year's World Cup hosted at Los Angeles Stadium amid major political tensions.
Iran's National Soccer Team is set to play in the second match of this year's World Cup hosted at Los Angeles (SoFi) Stadium amid major political tensions.
There has been plenty of government push-back, public protests, and even lawsuits in the days and weeks leading up to the match.
A protest against the current Iranian government is planned for Sunday at 11 a.m. by members of the local Iranian American Community. The group behind it says they're protesting the regime's ongoing human rights abuses with a focus on athletes and political prisoners.
There have already been several local protests in the leadup to the World Cup involving Iran. There was another protest outside Los Angeles City Hall on Wednesday, which called on FIFA to suspend and expel the Iranian regime from international football.
In a different protest at SoFi Stadium last Sunday, protesters called on FIFA to allow Iran's pre-revolution lion and son flags. Fans are currently barred from bringing the flag into World Cup stadiums, presumably because FIFA considers it a political symbol, which is prohibited under tournament rules.
"It's just off why they're banning certain flags. This is a sports game. They're claiming to not get involved politically, but they're making it political," said protest organizer Arzeo Rashidian. "We support the players because we know that not all of the players stand with what the regime has done, but they're sports, they're athletes."
A local organization filed a lawsuit against FIFA in L.A. County court this past week, calling the ban unlawful. Eyewitness News has reached out to FIFA for a statement on that lawsuit but still waiting to hear back.
The game against New Zealand kicks off Monday at 6 p.m. under heavy security.
Restrictions limit the team to arriving just one day before and leaving one day after the game.
FIFA blocked ticket sales for Iranian fans after the U.S. denied visas to 15 team officials over security fears.