Travel bans and ICE crackdowns cast shadow on FIFAâs âinclusiveâ World Cup
While the stage is set for the FIFA World Cup 2026 commencing on June 11, the mood in the host nations is not entirely euphoric
While the stage is set for the FIFA World Cup 2026 commencing on June 11, the mood in the host nations is not entirely euphoric. In Mexicoâs capital, where the first match is to be held, teachers associated with the CNTE union have toppled statues of football players and disrupted traffic in their protests for better wages and reversals of pension laws. But itâs not just Mexico. In the U.S., which is set to host 78 of the 104 FIFA matches, advocacy groups have raised concerns of a âclimate of fearâ and have been mobilising campaigns amid concerns over immigration enforcement activity near sport venues. FĂ©dĂ©ration Internationale de Football Association (FIFA)âs flagship campaign âFootball Unites the Worldâ celebrates the sportâs power as a unifying force. The upcoming World Cup series has already fallen short of this campaign with concerns looming over the safety and rights of workers, fans, journalists and communities due to travel bans and heightened Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) activities. Andrea Florence, the executive director for the Sport & Rights Alliance, told the Hindu,âPresident [Donald] Trumpâs harsh anti-human rights rhetoric, aggressive immigration policies, and mass deportation rates have already cast a dark shadow over the worldâs biggest sporting event.â âNot so inclusiveâ The Trump administrationâs hardline immigration crackdown has long raised concerns for what the global sports governing body regards as âthe biggest and most inclusive FIFA World Cup in historyâ Firstly, the travel bans effectively exclude various countries from the sports event.
The Trump administration has fully restricted and limited the entry of nationals from 19 countries such as Haiti and Iran whose teams have qualified to contest in the FIFA tournament. It has also issued partial restrictions for nationals from 20 countries including Senegal, which is participating in the World Cup series. While Iranâs integral football team has been granted permission, reports stated that Iran has accused the U.S. of denying visas to various staff members. Secondly, data from the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse show that a high presence of ICE activities overlaps with cities where tournaments are scheduled. The U.S. is hosting matches across 11 cities: Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco Bay Area and Seattle. Six of these cities are located in the States of Texas, Georgia, California and Floridaâ four of the top five States with the most number of persons detained by the ICE in Fiscal Year 2026. Additionally, offices in San Francisco, Miami, Los Angeles and New York where tournaments are being hosted had over 68,000 people in ICEâs Alternatives to Detention (ATD) monitoring programmes as of April this year. These are also among the top five cities with the highest number of persons in ATD programmes. ICE, the U.S. federal law enforcement agency, has emerged as the face of the Trump administrationâs immigration crackdown and its harsh raids and use of force have been met with outrage and protests.