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WOMEN'S FOOTBALL

Morocco to host CAF Women’s Champions League 2024 in November

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Africa’s ultimate destination for sports, Morocco, has again been awarded the hosting rights for the 2024 CAF Women’s Champions League.

Before now, the annual championship had been without a host before Morocco came to the rescue. It is perhaps the only country in Africa that meets the “Plug and Play” as at any time they meet the conditions to play.

According to CAF, the CAF Women’s Champions League will be played between 09-23 November 2024.

Morocco hosted the 2022 edition of the CAF Women’s Champions League – the premium women’s club football competition in Africa.

Eight Clubs will contest the top prize. Winners will get USD 400 000 in prize money with runners-up walking away with USD 250 000. 

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Mamelodi Sundowns are the current holders – having won the competition twice in three years.

Morocco’s ASFAR is the other team that has won the Competition – back in 2022 when they defeated Mamelodi Sundowns.

Since it’s inception, the CAF Women’s Champions League played a key role in shaping women’s football in Africa.

Morocco’s hosting of the CAF Women’s Champions League follows the nation’s successful hosting of the TotalEnergies CAF Women’s Africa Cup of Nations 2022 which also enjoyed unparallelled success.

Six Zonal tournaments took place to qualify six teams in addition to the host and the holder of 2023 title to the FT of CAF WCL 2024. The following teams are qualified:

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CAF Women’s Champions League Qualified Clubs:

Holders: Mamelodi Sundowns (South Africa)

Host: ASFAR (Morocco)

WAFU A: Aigles de la Medina (Senegal)

WAFU B: EDO Queens (Nigeria)

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COSAFA: University of Western Cape (South Africa)

UNAF: Tutankhamun (Egypt)

CECAFA: CBE FC (Ethiopia)

UNIFFAC: TP Mazembe (DR Congo)

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Kunle Solaja is the author of landmark books on sports and journalism as well as being a multiple award-winning journalist and editor of long standing. He is easily Nigeria’s foremost soccer diarist and Africa's most capped FIFA World Cup journalist, having attended all FIFA World Cup finals from Italia ’90 to Qatar 2022. He was honoured at the Qatar 2022 World Cup by FIFA and AIPS.

WOMEN'S FOOTBALL

Australia first to qualify for Women’s World Cup

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Australia became the first nation to qualify for next year’s Women’s World Cup in Brazil with a 2-1 ​win over North Korea that booked their place in the ‌Asian Cup semi-finals on Friday.

All Asian Cup semi-finalists earn automatic berths to the global showpiece, with the losing quarter-finalists to play off for two more spots ​on the Gold Coast next week.

Australia midfielder Alanna Kennedy ​scored her fifth goal at this year’s Asian Cup in ⁠the ninth minute against the North Koreans, while captain Sam ​Kerr doubled the Matildas’ lead just after the break before Chae Un-Yong ​pulled one back.

Australia will meet the winners of the match between defending champions China and Taiwan, who clash at the same Perth Rectangular Stadium on Saturday.

“I ​felt it was a really good team performance, defensively,” said Kerr. “The ​crowd was immense today, got us over the line. We’re going to need ‌them ⁠again in the semi-final.”

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Kennedy has been in fine form for the 2010 champions and pounced when Kerr robbed opposing captain An Kuk-Hyang of the ball on the right side of the penalty area.

Kerr’s cut-back ​was intercepted but ​the clearance fell ⁠to Kennedy who lashed a fierce strike from the edge of the box inside the right ​post.

Kerr stretched the lead with a poacher’s goal in ​the 47th ⁠minute, swooping on a defensive mistake and thumping in another rising left-foot shot.

North Korea got their consolation goal in the 65th minute when ⁠Kim ​Kyong-Yong’s cross found Chae who slid the ​ball home.

Midfielder Emily van Egmond became Australia’s joint most capped player, joining Clare Polkinghorne ​on 169 appearances.

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-Reuters

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WOMEN'S FOOTBALL

Iranian women’s soccer squad member changes mind on Australia asylum offer, to return home

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Supporters of the Iranian women's soccer team gather at Sydney Airport, after five of the players were granted asylum, in Sydney, Australia, March 10, 2026. REUTERS/Jeremy Piper

Australian police helped two more ​members of the Iranian women’s soccer delegation slip their minders to claim asylum, but one has changed her mind ‌and decided to go back to Iran, the country’s interior minister said on Wednesday.

Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke announced in parliament the squad member’s decision to return home, after five players from the team were granted asylum a day earlier.

A player and a support staff member accepted the government’s open offer of aid on Tuesday ​evening.

“One of the two who had made the decision to stay last night had spoken to some of the teammates who ​had left, and had changed her mind,” Burke told parliament.

“In Australia, people are able to change their mind, ⁠people are able to travel. And so, we respect the context in which she has made that decision.”

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It was not immediately clear who ​had decided to return to Iran.

Burke said the rest of the players have been moved to a safe location after the member contacted the ​Iranian embassy, giving away their location

Concerns about the players’ safety grew after Iranian state television labelled the team “wartime traitors” for refusing to sing the national anthem during the women’s Asian Cup match in Australia earlier this month.

The two additional members of the delegation – 21-year-old striker Mohaddeseh Zolfi and support staffer Zahra Soltan Moshkehkar – were ​removed from the rest of the team with the aid of Australian Federal Police before they boarded a domestic flight to Sydney.

Before leaving ​the country, Australian officials separated the remaining team from their Iranian minders at Sydney airport and informed them of their options before they flew out of ‌Australia. All ⁠those that made it to the airport elected to return to Iran.

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“What we made sure of was that there was no rushing, there was no pressure. Everything was about ensuring the dignity for those individuals to make a choice,” Burke said during a media briefing in Canberra.

FEAR FOR FAMILIES

Burke said some players had asked him about the possibility of aiding their family members leave Iran.

“Obviously, when people are permanent residents, there ​are rights that they have in ​terms of sponsoring other family ⁠members. But all of it only becomes relevant if people can get out of Iran in the first place,” he said.

Some discussed their options with family but declined the offer to remain in Australia. The ​team has since reached Kuala Lumpur on their way to Iran.

The Iranian team’s campaign in the tournament ​started just as ⁠the U.S. and Israel launched air strikes on Iran, killing the Islamic Republic’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. They were eliminated from the tournament on Sunday.

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A group of Iranians living in Australia gathered to protest against the Iranian government and surrounded the players’ bus in Gold Coast when they left the ⁠hotel for ​the airport.

Many also turned up at the Sydney airport on Tuesday evening while they ​were being transferred to the international terminal, television footage showed.

The office of Iran’s general prosecutor said on Tuesday the remaining members of the team were invited back to the ​country “with peace and confidence,” Iranian media reported.

-Reuters

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WOMEN'S FOOTBALL

Iranian women soccer players’ hotel escape aided by Australian police

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Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Tony Burke poses with Fatemeh Pasandideh, Mona Hamoudi, Atefeh Ramezanizadeh, Zahra Ghanbari and Zahra Sarbali, the five women from the Iranian women’s soccer team who were granted humanitarian visas, in Queensland, Australia, March 9, 2026. @Tony_Burke on X/Handout via REUTERS THIS IMAGE HAS BEEN SUPPLIED BY A THIRD PARTY

  • * Five players sought asylum after being called ‘wartime traitors’
  • * Australian Federal Police moved players to a safe location
  • *Asylum offer remains open for other squad members

Australian police extracted five Iranian women soccer players from the ​team’s hotel before they were granted asylum, the interior minister said on Tuesday, as details of their ‌escape from Iranian government minders emerged.

The five players, including team captain Zahra Ghanbari, sought protection after the team were branded “wartime traitors” for refusing to sing their national anthem before an Asian Cup match.

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Australia’s Minister for Foreign Affairs Penny Wong, Deputy Prime Minister Richard Marles, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Minister for Climate Change Chris Bowen attend a press conference at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, March 10, 2026. AAP Image/Mick Tsikas/via REUTERS

The team’s Asian Cup campaign began as the U.S. and Israel ​launched air strikes on Iran and Australian media reported the team had been accompanied by Iranian government ​officials who were controlling their movements.

Conversations with the players about seeking asylum had been ongoing ⁠for several days, Interior Minister Tony Burke told a press conference as he confirmed the women had been granted asylum in Australia.

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The ​players granted asylum were Ghanbari, Zahra Sarbali Alishah, Mona Hamoudi and Atefeh Ramezanizadeh – all in their early 30s – as well ​as 21-year-old Fatemeh Pasandideh.

MOVED TO SAFETY

The five players were moved to a safe location by the Australian Federal Police on Monday evening, where they remain under their protection, Burke said.

Even before their defection, Australia had deployed its own officers to protect the women.

“There’s been a ​good police presence at different points, and we just made sure that opportunity was there,” he said.

Once immigration ​officials completed the processing of the women’s humanitarian visas around 1:30 a.m. on Tuesday (1530 GMT Monday), celebrations broke out among those present.

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“Once everything had been ‌signed ⁠off last night, there were lots of photos, lots of celebrating, and then a spontaneous outcry of ‘Aussie, Aussie, Aussie, oi, oi, oi’,” Burke said.

“These women are great athletes, great people, and they’re going to feel very much at home in Australia.”

TEAMMATES

Four of the players are teammates at the Bam Khatoon club, which has won the Iranian women’s championship ​a record 11 times and ​is where Ghanbari also ⁠played until she moved to Persepolis for this season.

Captain Ghanbari was suspended for several days in 2024 after her hijab, the head covering that all Iranian women players must wear, slipped off during a goal ​celebration in an Asian Champions League fixture.

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Iran players pose prior to the AFC Women’s Asian Cup Group A match between Iran and the Philippines at Gold Coast Stadium on the Gold Coast, Australia, March 8, 2026. Dave Hunt/AAP Image/via REUTERS

The 33-year-old striker, Iran’s record international goalscorer in ​the women’s ⁠game, was allowed to return to play only after she and Bam Khatoon issued apologies.

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Ghanbari’s head scarf also slipped off her head several times during Iran’s final Asian Cup match against the Philippines on Sunday, when defeat ended their participation ⁠in the ​tournament.

Burke said the offer of asylum remained open for the other 21 ​members of the squad who were still at the Gold Coast hotel, though he said it was likely some would return home to Iran.

“These ​women have been weighing up an incredibly difficult decision,” he said.

-Reuters

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