
Africa’s best referee, the 2025 CAF Referee of the Year, and the first Somali ever selected to officiate a FIFA World Cup, Omar Abdulkadir Artan was denied entry to the United States despite holding a valid visa and a diplomatic passport. It is a shocking affront to meritocracy and the spirit of global sport.
This wasn’t some administrative hiccup. Artan, a highly respected match official with impeccable credentials from AFCON and CAF Champions League finals, arrived at Miami International Airport ready to make history, only to be turned away over vague “vetting concerns” tied to his Somali nationality.
He was sent back to Turkey, his dream shattered at the border.
What did FIFA do? In a spineless move that prioritized bureaucracy over justice, FIFA simply removed him from the officiating list. No fight, no public pressure on the host nation, just spineless compliance.
And the silence from Africa’s own institutions? Deafening and disgraceful. The Confederation of African Football (CAF), which had just crowned Artan the continent’s finest referee, offered little more than token thanks in his personal statement.
The African Union (AU)? Nowhere to be seen. No emergency statements, no unified diplomatic pushback, no rallying of African voices demanding accountability.
From governments across the continent to football federations that should be defending their own, the lack of solidarity has been nothing short of betrayal. This is the same Africa that preaches “unity” and “Pan-Africanism,” yet fails to stand up when one of its brightest talents is humiliated on the world stage.
This incident reeks of the Trump administration’s racist and discriminatory immigration policies. Somalia remains targeted under expanded travel restrictions that disproportionately affect African and Muslim-majority nations. Even with a diplomatic passport and pre-approved visa, Artan, an accredited World Cup official, couldn’t overcome the systemic bias.
Trump-era rhetoric has long painted Africans in derogatory terms, and actions like this give those words teeth. Denying a vetted professional entry purely on the basis of nationality isn’t “vetting.” It is profiling that undermines the very universality the World Cup claims to celebrate.
The message is clear: In today’s America, excellence from certain parts of the world doesn’t matter. Your passport and skin matter more.
Africa must do better. CAF and the AU owe Artan, and every aspiring African talent, a robust defense, not quiet acquiescence.
Real solidarity isn’t hashtags or empty praise; it’s confronting injustice head-on. Until then, incidents like this will continue to expose the hollowness of continental rhetoric while the world watches Africa’s best get grounded before they can even take the field.
This is not just about one referee. It’s about dignity, fairness, and whether Africa will finally demand the respect it deserves.
Ras Mubarak,
Former MP, & Leader of the Trans Africa Tourism & Unity campaign


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