ARTICLE AD BOX
Somali referee Omar Artan will receive the full World Cup remuneration he was entitled to, even though he was denied entry to the United States to officiate at the tournament.
Artan, 34, was detained and questioned for 11 hours by U.S. immigration officials after arriving at Miami International Airport on Monday. He was later informed that he would not be allowed into the country. His diplomatic passport and single‑entry U.S. visa were rejected.
A U.S. government official said the decision was linked to an alleged “association with suspected members of terror organisations.”
Artan said border officials asked him about possible links to the Somali militant group Al Shabaab, allegations he strongly denied.
“I had the right papers and everything. I had the right visa,” he said.
“I’m just simply a referee who’s trying to live my dream, the biggest dream of my life, to come to the World Cup.”
After being refused entry, Artan was put on a flight to Turkey. FIFA officials assisted him during a stopover in Istanbul before he returned to Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu.
Sources told BBC Sport that although Artan will not take part in the World Cup, FIFA has committed to paying him the full fee he would have earned at the tournament. Match officials are not informed of their exact World Cup earnings beforehand, with payments typically made after the competition concludes.
The setback has not derailed Artan’s career trajectory. The award‑winning official has since been invited to referee the UEFA Super Cup between Paris Saint‑Germain and Aston Villa in Salzburg on August 12.
Following his return home, Artan received a warm welcome and expressed gratitude to those who supported him.
He thanked “my people and my country” and has already set his sights on officiating at the 2030 World Cup.
Artan’s exclusion comes after a landmark year in his career. Named the Confederation of African Football men’s referee of the year in 2025, he became the first Somali official to oversee a continental club final when he took charge of the second leg of the CAF Champions League Final 2025 between Pyramids FC and Mamelodi Sundowns.
He also officiated three matches at the FIFA Under‑20 World Cup in Chile, including the third‑place play‑off, before handling two group‑stage fixtures at the Africa Cup of Nations, having also featured at the tournament the previous year.
Despite missing out on the biggest assignment of his career, Artan’s standing within international football remains strong, with FIFA’s decision to honour his full tournament payment providing some consolation after a deeply disappointing end to his World Cup dream.
Vanguard News
The post FIFA to pay Somali referee Artan full World Cup fee despite US entry denial appeared first on Vanguard News.

2 hours ago
1














English (US) ·