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Jun 09, 2026
Analyzed by Llama- 4 Scout 17B 16E Instruct

US denies entry to Somali referee set to officiate in World Cup

AI Summary
The US has denied entry to Somali referee Omar Artan, who was set to officiate in the FIFA World Cup, citing vetting concerns. The denial has raised concerns about US travel restrictions and their impact on the tournament.

The US Travel Restriction Controversy

The United States has denied entry to a top Somali referee who was set to participate in the FIFA World Cup, raising concerns about Washington’s travel restrictions and their impact on the tournament.

The Denial of Entry

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) confirmed to Al Jazeera on Monday that Omar Artan was not allowed into the country after arriving in South Florida on Saturday. Artan, who is listed as one of FIFA’s 52 World Cup referees, was “determined to be inadmissible due to vetting concerns and was denied entry”, a DHS spokesperson said in an email, without providing further details.

The Impact on the World Cup

The denial of entry is the latest controversy surrounding US travel policies and the World Cup, which is being cohosted by Mexico and Canada. Iran’s national team has to stay in Mexico due to visa issues. The players will be allowed to arrive in the US to play their game, but they must then return to their base south of the border. Still, some of the team’s staff members were denied US visas altogether.

The Reaction from Authorities

On Monday, Zohran Mamdani, the mayor of New York, rebuked the Trump administration’s plans for a surge of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) agents in the city during the tournament. “Soccer would not exist without immigrants. Immigrants play and coach the game, work in the stadiums, fill the stands, and make celebrations like the World Cup possible. Six of the players on the US Men’s National Team are immigrants,” Mamdani wrote in a social media post.

The Future of US Travel Policies

The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR) decried the travel bans after Artan was denied entry. “Our nation should not ban anyone from our shores simply because of their race or their ethnicity. That’s especially true of a coach or referee or anyone else coming to participate in the World Cup,” Edward Ahmed Mitchell, CAIR’s deputy director, told Al Jazeera.