Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

International Federation imposes four-year judo ban on Iran over discrimination

It has been backdated to start in 2019 and will run to September 2023.

An Iranian judo player at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.
An Iranian judo player at the 2016 Summer Olympics. Credit: Wikimedia Commons.

The International Judo Federation suspended Iran on Thursday for attempting to prevent its athletes compete against opponents from Israel, reported The Associated Press.

The IJF imposed a four-year ban that prevents Iranian judokas from competing at its events, including world championships, and officials cannot take any part in the world governing body. Iranian judokas going to the upcoming Tokyo Olympics are exempt from the ban because the team is sent by the national Olympic body, not the national judo federation.

The ban has been backdated to start in 2019 and will run to September 2023. It can be lifted if the Iranian judo federation respects the IJF’s rules on discrimination and allows its athletes to compete with Israelis.

The ruling comes after the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) overturned Iran’s suspension from international judo events last month and ordered a disciplinary review.

The IJF said on Thursday that it “continues to defend the fundamental human values and rights of all its members, with a special emphasis on the rights of athletes, and reiterates its commitment to fight against any form of discrimination in the sport of judo.”

Iran’s actions against Israeli competitors made headlines when former Iranian judoka Saeid Mollaei left his team in 2019, saying he was forced to lose matches to avoid facing Israeli athletes. CAS judges previously said the case “clearly reveals an institutionalized scheme” to prevent athletes from facing Israelis.

Iranian officials can again challenge the IJF verdict at the CAS.

“They want to make a deal, but I don’t. I’m not satisfied with it, so we’ll see what happens,” the president told reporters.
Since Oct. 7, 2023, the Toronto Police Service has made “over 517 arrests and laid over 1,275 charges in connection with demonstrations, protests and hate‑motivated offenses,” its police chief said.
“What made it easy for the D.C. government to do this is that they already had an existing standing program,” Ron Halber, CEO of the JCRC of Greater Washington, told JNS.
“We won’t support a Democrat who doesn’t represent the views and values of the vast majority of American Jews,” the Jewish Democratic Council of America said.
“For years, the Biden-Harris administration doggedly harassed and targeted Christians simply for living according to their beliefs,” Rep. Tim Walberg said.
Calls are mounting for the University of Portsmouth to act after a history professor posted on social media that “blowback is bad, but it is also inevitable.”