Does referee case show Fifa has lost control of its own World Cup?
Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Fifa president Gianni Infantino has ingratiated himself with US President Donald Trump over the past two years By Dale Johnson Football issues correspondent Published 8 minutes ago There had always been real concerns that supporters would have difficulties getting into the United States for the 2026 World Cup. But not a referee. The tournament is supposed to bring together the best of the best in football - players, coaches and officials. Omar Artan is the number one referee from Africa. He will not be allowed to officiate at the World Cup. Artan, from Somalia, flew into Miami to join up with the other 51 referees. After what he says was an 11-hour grilling by immigration officials, he was put back on a plane. "It is pretty clear that the fears of an ideological and discriminatory visa policy from the US government is being realised," said Piara Powar, executive director of discrimination campaign group Fare. "Never have we seen the farce of an official Fifa referee being refused entry as he arrives for final preparations." Concerns remain about the potential presence of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) at stadiums, and how fans could be affected. With 48 hours still to go until the World Cup kicks off, does Fifa have little control about what will happen outside the stadiums? Artan earned his World Cup dream Image source, Getty Images Image caption, Omar Artan has refereed several major games over the past 12 months, including the African Champions League final and the third-place play-off of the U-20 World Cup in Chile After the controversy of the 2018 and 2022 tournaments in Russia and Qatar, the 2026 edition was supposed to give everyone a chance to concentrate on the football. Remarkably, this World Cup is in danger of being more controversial. The astronomical cost of tickets, a subpoena over ticket practices, criticism of Fifa over hotel bookings and transport prices have dogged the build-up. But this story is about a member of Fifa's own delegation being subjected to hours of questioning before being put on a flight back to from where they came. Artan had a year to remember in 2025, becoming the first Somali to take charge of a continental final. In June 2025, he officiated the second leg of Pyramids FC's African Champions League final victory over Mamelodi Sundowns. Fifa appointed Artan to the U-20 World Cup in Chile, where he took charge of three matches including the third-place play-off. At the end of the year he refereed two group games at the Africa Cup of Nations, having also officiated at the tournament in 2024. Then in March 2026, Artan received the ultimate accolade which should have been the pinnacle of his career. "Every referee's ambition is to go to the World Cup," Artan told BBC Somali in an interview last week. "When you are selected, you feel that all your hard work was worth it. Years of effort finally made sense." Artan should have become the first Somali to officiat
FIFAs referee decisions highlight their overreachcontrolling every pitch detail while ignoring the beautiful games spirit. True football freedom lies in letting players and fans decide what matters most. #FIFA #WorldCup (107 characters)
This referee case is exactly what happens when FIFA tries to micromanage everything. Theyre so focused on controlling the pitch that theyve lost sight of the bigger picture - letting competent officials like Artan officiate shows respect for the games global spirit. FIFAs overreach in immigration decisions undermines their own World Cup credibility. #FIFA #WorldCup #RefereeControversy
This referee case reveals FIFAs flawed logic - theyre letting immigration red tape ruin their own World Cup. If they truly want the best officials, they should facilitate their entry, not create barriers. The irony is stunning. #WorldCup #FIFA #RefereeIssues