Iran issued Sarasadat an arrest warrant after she removed her hijab. She doesn’t ‘regret anything'

Iranian chess player Sarasadat Khademalsharieh said the warrant was "the most horrible thing" that happened to her but she has no regrets about competing in a tournament without a hijab.

A woman giving an interview.

Iranian chess player Sarasadat Khademalsharieh, better known as Sara Khadem, says not wearing hijab has become one of the symbols of the movement in Iran and she also decided to do "something that I wanted to, to be myself ... I was motivated by the people of Iran". Credit: Reuters

Key Points
  • Sarasadat Khademalsharieh played in a world championship without a headscarf, mandatory under Iran’s dress code.
  • Ms Khademalsharieh arrived in Spain after authorities issued an arrest warrant.
  • Nationwide protests swept Iran following the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of Iran’s morality police.
An Iranian chess player, who moved to Spain after she competed without a hijab and had an arrest warrant issued against her, has no regrets over her bold gesture in support of the protest movement against her country's clerical leadership.

But 25-year-old Sarasadat Khademalsharieh, better known as Sara Khadem, also said the warrant, which made her return to Iran impossible, was "the most horrible thing" that happened to her.

She said that, after playing in December's FIDE World Rapid and Blitz Chess Championships in Kazakhstan's Almaty without the headscarf mandatory under Iran's strict Islamic dress code, she had hardly expected harsher reprisals than a travel ban.
"(As chess players) we always have to predict what is going to happen next, but ... it didn't go as I expected," she told Reuters at an undisclosed location in southern Spain where she now lives with her filmmaker husband and child.

Ms Khadem, who arrived in Spain in January on a residence visa linked to the purchase of property, said Iranian authorities had told her to record a video saying that she regretted her actions as a condition of returning home.

She refused, and subsequently learned about the warrant.
Still, removing the hijab was "something that I thought was right to do and I don't regret anything", she said, adding that she only used to wear the headscarf at tournaments when there were cameras, and that many Iranian sportswomen felt the same way.

"But it (no hijab) has become one of the symbols of the movement in Iran and I also decided to finally do something that I wanted to, to be myself...I was motivated by the people of Iran."

Laws enforcing mandatory hijab-wearing have become a flashpoint during the unrest that has swept Iran since mid-September when a 22-year-old Iranian-Kurdish woman,
Ms Khadem said Ms Amini's death "made us all heartbroken", inspiring many to protest. A string of sportswomen competing overseas have since appeared without their headscarves in public.

"There are lots of things that people are not happy about at the moment, so even if this time it doesn't change anything, I think there will come a time when people will rise up again," said Ms Khadem, who does not consider herself a political activist, but wants to be a voice for change.

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3 min read
Published 16 February 2023 11:36am
Source: Reuters


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