Iran’s lone female minister faces backlash over “Ardabilgate” airport incident

Iran’s Transport and Urban Development Minister Farzaneh Sadegh Malvajerd has become the focus of a political scandal dubbed “Ardabilgate” after reportedly refusing a baggage inspection at Ardabil airport, Iranian media said.
Sadegh, the only woman in President Masoud Pezeshkian’s cabinet, had attended a trilateral meeting with Azerbaijan and Russia in Baku on the North–South transport corridor before returning by road to Ardabil. Witnesses said she refused a bag check and left the terminal in anger, threatening to “seal the airport doors.” She later traveled to Tehran by car instead of flying.
The airport’s director, Mohammad Kasabi, was dismissed the next day, though Iran’s Airports and Air Navigation Company denied any link between the firing and the incident. Conservative lawmakers demanded an inquiry into why the minister declined the security check, while reformist outlets said the case was being exploited for political reasons.
Analysts quoted by Iranian and Azerbaijani media said conservatives opposed to the reformist wing of Pezeshkian’s government had amplified the episode to attack both the president and a female minister. Official sources in Tehran, meanwhile, accused “pro-Zionist media” abroad of trying to discredit Sadegh’s Baku visit, where progress was reportedly made on accelerating the North–South corridor project.
The contents of the minister’s bag remain unknown, but experts said her dismissal is unlikely, as all ministers are confirmed by Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, whose personnel decisions are rarely challenged.