Sputnik - Four members from the Iranian delegation have been denied entry visas to attend the 2017 International Weightlifting Federation World Championships, set to run in Anaheim, California between November 28 and December 6. Sputnik spoke to an Iranian sports official about the cause of the incident.
Phil Andrews, chief executive ofUSA Weightlifting, confirmed toindependent sports news resource insidethegames that an Iranian athlete had been denied an entry visa underrule 214b, which states that the applicant must make clear his intent toreturn totheir home country afterthe conclusion ofthe sporting event.
"In consulting the State Department yesterday, the athlete did not provide sufficient evidence inthe same way ashis fellow team members," Andrewssaid. The other Iranians denied entry include delegates and a therapist, according tothe official. Andrews said that these persons "did not have the support letter fromthe Organizing Committee," and had only "asked forthem overnight."
Speaking toSputnik Persian, Iranian Weightlifting Federation chairman Ali Moradi confirmed that the athlete and delegates had been rejected, butclarified that a second athlete was amongthose who had been denied entry.
Moradi also said that the incident was unlikely tohave been any kind ofplanned provocation. "11 weightlifters fromthe Iranian delegation were approved bythe US Embassy. It's unlikely that the denial ofvisas toseveral ofour athletes was some kind ofdeliberate action," he explained.
Speaking toreporters ata press conference onWednesday, Moradi named the athletes who had been denied US visas asAyyub Mousavi and Saleh Cheraghi. The athletes applied forvisas atthe US Embassy inthe UAE, butwere refused. Mr. Moradi expressed doubts that the Iranian delegation had problems withathletes' documents, and said he believes that this was probably a mistake byUS Embassy personnel.
The official added that if Mousavi, who is inthe 94 kg weight category, is not allowed tocompete, the Iranian team will collapse.
Iran's Weightlifting Championship Committee says it hopes that the remaining athletes will be given additional time toobtain visas. To resolve the issue, Iran's Ministries ofForeign Affairs and Sport and its national Olympic Committee have begun efforts tocoordinate their actions toensure the issues overtheir athletes are resolved beforecompetition starts.
Last month, President Trump signed offon an updated list ofcountries, including Iran, whose citizens faceentry restrictionstothe United States. In addition toIran, Chad, Libya, North Korea, Somalia, Syria, Venezuela and Yemen are also onthe list, which will go intoeffect October 18 afterthe original six-country restricted travel decree expires.