Fifa Says Rainbow Flags Can Be Shown at Egypt v Iran, but Tensions Remain

Author: Qoo Media

Fifa has confirmed that rainbow flags will be allowed inside the stadium for the Egypt v Iran World Cup match in Seattle, even after both teams objected to the LGBTQ+ celebrations planned around the game. The decision keeps the focus on the pitch, but it also leaves the wider political and cultural tensions around the fixture in place.

The match is being framed by Seattle organisers as a Pride weekend event, though Fifa president Gianni Infantino has insisted the festivities are separate from the game itself. In a statement, Infantino said there will be no “Pride Match” at the World Cup and that the external events in the city “have nothing to do with the match itself”.

Complaints from both teams

Iran and Egypt both lodged complaints with Fifa over the LGBTQ+ events staged around the fixture and asked for them to be cancelled. Iran’s head coach, Amir Ghalenoei, opened the team’s pre-match press conference with a request that questions stay focused on the team, tactics and the match.

Ghalenoei also said he did not want to discuss “anything that is banned in our league”. He later said the team would concentrate on football and only football when the game begins.

Egypt head coach Hossam Hassan took a similar line, saying his team was focused on football and that Fifa would handle the organisational side. He added that Egypt respected the rules of respect and fair play, along with any guidelines set by Fifa.

Fifa’s position on flags and stadium conduct

A Fifa spokesperson said general statements of human rights, including rainbow flags and other flags representing sexual orientation and gender identity, are permitted under the 2026 stadium code of conduct. Those flags may be displayed inside stadiums as long as they are used in a way that is consistent with the code.

That position means supporters will be able to bring visible symbols of solidarity into the venue, even as the teams themselves try to keep the build-up centered on football. The ruling also underlines Fifa’s effort to separate match operations from the outside Pride programming in Seattle.

Iran’s frustration with its tournament treatment

Iran has already described itself as the “most oppressed” team at the tournament, and Ghalenoei said the squad had been “deprived” of its rights by restrictions on when it could arrive and leave a host city. Unlike their previous two Group G matches, the team arrived in Seattle two days before the match.

Ghalenoei said Fifa had tried to listen to Iran’s concerns, but argued that the federation had not been encouraged. He also suggested Infantino had been blindsided by restrictions imposed by the US administration, saying the Fifa president had worked hard over the past six months to reduce the challenges Iran faced.

As the game approaches, the competing messages are clear: Seattle’s Pride programming will continue outside the match, rainbow flags will be allowed in the stadium, and both teams are trying to keep the football itself at the center of attention. Fifa has drawn a line between the event in the city and the match on the field, but the controversy around the fixture has already made that separation harder to ignore.

Read more at: www.theguardian.com
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