Why Omar Artan will receive full World Cup fee despite being denied USA visa for tournament
Article excerpt
Somali referee Omar Artan will collect his full World Cup compensation despite never officiating a single match after being denied a USA visa for the tournament. FIFA's decision to pay him anyway underscores an unusual circumstance: Artan wasn't cut for poor performance, injury, or misconduct, he was blocked by immigration authorities before he could even arrive. The fee structure typically requires refs to work to get paid, making this a notable exception that highlights how visa denials can derail even elite officials' careers.
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Omar Artan will still receive his World Cup fee, even though the Somali referee’s tournament ended before he ever reached the pitch.
That matters because Artan was not removed for performance, fitness or discipline.
He was blocked by an immigration decision, and FIFA now appears to be separating that from the appointment he had already earned.
Omar Artan will receive World Cup fee in gesture from FIFA
In a BBC MOTD post, it was reported that Artan will receive his full tournament fee despite being unable to officiate at the World Cup.
“Somali referee Omar Artan, who was denied entry to the United States to officiate at the World Cup, will receive his full tournament fee. Sources told BBC Sport that even though Artan will take no part in the World Cup, FIFA has committed to paying his salary. Referees do not know the actual fee they will receive for officiating at the World Cup, which is paid after the tournament is over.”
No concrete public explanation has been given for why FIFA made that decision. The likeliest reading is that this is a goodwill gesture and a recognition that Artan’s World Cup place was lost through a visa and entry process outside his control.
Photo by Abuukar Mohamed Muhidin/Anadolu via Getty Images
Reports say Artan had been selected for the tournament, traveled through Istanbul to Miami, was questioned for hours, and then denied entry. U.S. authorities cited vetting concerns, while FIFA said immigration decisions sit with host governments and that Artan’s status would not be changed.
Omar Artan’s career will thrive despite losing World Cup chance
The optics were brutal for FIFA and the United States because Artan was not just another official. He was set to become the first Somali referee to work at a men’s World Cup, had been named Africa’s best male referee, and had recently handled the CAF Champions League final.
Somali officials and critics argued that the decision undermined football’s fairness and global image. The backlash grew because no detailed evidence has been publicly released to support the most serious suggestions around the denial.
UEFA then moved quickly to give Artan another elite stage. The governing body appointed him to referee the UEFA Super Cup between Paris Saint-Germain and Aston Villa in Salzburg on August 12, with Aleksander Ceferin framing it as a show of respect for his ability.
That appointment does not replace a World Cup dream, but it does protect Artan’s standing.
FIFA paying the fee now does something similar. It cannot undo the missed matches, the public embarrassment, or the lost historic moment for Somalia. It can, however, make clear that Artan is being treated as a selected World Cup referee whose absence was not his professional failure.
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