Inside the Australian hotel where Iranian footballers escaped to claim asylum
2 hours ago
What stood out at the time was the ease with which they were talking together.
They were casual, smiley, sometimes laughing.
So that was our biggest question mark.
Those worries only grew after the team were seen singing the anthem in their two subsequent matches.
The implication was they felt pressure - direct or otherwise - to do so.
Earlier in the day, members of the team had come and gone.
That was what we had expected.
This gathering that was playing out in front of us was different.
A hotel security guard in a blue shirt also joined the group.
They talked some more, before the group sauntered casually towards the lobby's automatic doors.
Outside, stood several uniformed Australian Federal Police officers.
But there had been a police presence all day.
It was all so low-key, we assumed the group was going for a bit of fresh air - like their colleagues had done earlier.
A player and coach Marziyeh Jafari followed them.
The sudden movement in an otherwise tranquil foyer was striking.
We followed, filming on phones.
The timestamp shows this was 6.
The door at the bottom of the stairs was locked, so the Iranians retreated, looking stressed.
The women - we now know it was five of them - had gone.
Perhaps it was the players not joining them that had alerted them to their escape.
"In Australia people are able to change their mind.
"We went to the stadium chanting [their] name, saying if you want to stay here, we are going to support you," Orouji said.
And that, said Orouji, was a game-changer for at least some of the women choosing to seek asylum.
"They mentioned that, they said it was great," he says.
"They don't have internet all the time," he explains.
There are more than 85,000 Iranians living in Australia.
She'd been at the stadium on Sunday night, keen to show her support as many ways as possible.
"We are very concerned for their lives, and we are here to support them any way they want. "
"They were under a lot of stress.
While activists played a key part, more has emerged about the government's role.
In fact delicate operations had been going for several days.
Immigration officials had sought to have meetings with the players at their hotel.
"People then started to come down and talk in the foyer of the hotel.
They were moving around, at least at that hour, without people watching them," he said.
And it is increasingly clear that the Australian government was reinforcing this message.
"They were given a choice," Burke said.
"We made sure of was was that there was no rushing.
Everything was about ensuring the dignity for those individuals to make a choice. "
Ultimately the remaining team members got on the flight to Kuala Lumpur.
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