Revealed- Eight of Iran's women's football team are men waiting for sex change
There is controversy brewing after it has been revealed that,eight of Iran's women's football team are men who are awaiting sex swap operations.The country's football bosses have been branded 'unethical' for fielding men as women.
According to The SUN, officials have now reportedly ordered the gender testing of the entire national team and the top players in their country's competitive league.(
This is not the first time the team has been involved in a gender scandal.Just last year, four players were found to be men and in 2010 questions were asked about the national team's goalkeeper.
This resulted in the sports Iranian governing body introducing mandatory gender-testing in 2014.It is not known how many of the current team were born males, The Sun reported.
Those who cannot prove their gender are barred from competing in the women's competition, but they can be re-admitted after completing gender reassignment.
According to The SUN, officials have now reportedly ordered the gender testing of the entire national team and the top players in their country's competitive league.(
Eight players) have been playing with Iran’s female team without completing sex change operations,' Mojtabi Sharifi, an official close to the Iranian football league, said according to Iranian media.Mr Sharifi did not name the eight players at the centre of the current controversy.
This is not the first time the team has been involved in a gender scandal.Just last year, four players were found to be men and in 2010 questions were asked about the national team's goalkeeper.
This resulted in the sports Iranian governing body introducing mandatory gender-testing in 2014.It is not known how many of the current team were born males, The Sun reported.
Those who cannot prove their gender are barred from competing in the women's competition, but they can be re-admitted after completing gender reassignment.
‘If these people can solve their problems through surgery and be in a position to receive the necessary medical qualifications, they will then be able to participate in [women's] football,’ Ahmad Hashemian, head of the Iranian football federation’s medical committee, said last year
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