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White House Defends Visa Ban on Somali Referee, Iranians for 2026 World Cup

The White House has defended the denial of US entry to Somali referee Omar Artan and certain Iranian support staff ahead of the 2026 World Cup, citing security vetting concerns. Artan, who arrived with a valid visa, was turned back at Miami International Airport and sent to Turkey.

Andrew Giuliani, executive director of the White House World Cup Task Force, said officials were denied “for good reason,” noting links between some individuals claiming to be coaches and Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). He added that no players or coaches have been denied entry.

Key Points:

A qualified African referee is excluded due to security concerns, impacting tournament fairness.
The ban on Iranian officials with alleged IRGC links reflects ongoing US‑Iran tensions.
The US prioritises security screening over the principle of merit‑based selection for global events.
FIFA’s authority is limited as host countries control immigration and visa decisions.
The decision may fuel criticism that the US is politicising the World Cup.

Giuliani stated there are no credible threats to the tournament, but intelligence monitoring will continue throughout the event.

Sources: Complete Sports, AFP, White House Task Force

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