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2026 FIFA World Cup
11JUN

HRW: 15 of 16 host cities miss rights bar

3 min read
09:02UTC

Human Rights Watch published 'Climate of Fear' on 27 April, naming Emmy-winning journalist Mario Guevara and journalist Estefany Rodriguez as ICE arrest cases, and recording FIFA's December 2025 award of its Peace Prize to Donald Trump.

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Key takeaway

HRW named two journalist arrests, recorded the Trump Peace Prize, and clocked 15 of 16 cities non-compliant.

Human Rights Watch published '2026 World Cup: Tournament Will Kick Off in Climate of Fear' on Monday 27 April 2026, three days before the Vancouver Congress 1. The report extends the host-city audit HRW released on 10 April , which had counted 167,000 ICE arrests across 11 host-city regions, averaging roughly 15,000 per host-city area over fifteen months, and demanded action plans by Monday 11 May.

The 27 April report adds named incidents. Mario Guevara, an Emmy-winning journalist, was arrested in Atlanta in June 2025 while filming a protest and subsequently deported to El Salvador by ICE (Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the US federal immigration enforcement agency). Estefany Rodriguez, a journalist, was detained in March 2026 while covering ICE raids without a warrant being presented. Mexico, the report records, enacted a new law granting authorities 'virtually unlimited power' to access citizen information without judicial authorisation 2.

The report also documents a December 2025 sequence FIFA had not previously addressed: the federation awarded Donald Trump the first FIFA Peace Prize that month, while declining HRW's call for an 'ICE Truce' across the host cities . As of 1 May, all but one of the 16 US host city committees has either failed to publish a human rights action plan or produced one HRW judges inadequate. If 11 May arrives unmet, the next 31 days to kickoff begin with formal non-compliance across 15 of 16 cities, against a published deadline FIFA has chosen not to police.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Human Rights Watch, one of the world's largest human rights organisations, published a report saying the 2026 World Cup will start in a climate of fear. The report named two journalists who were arrested by US immigration enforcement near World Cup host cities: one was deported to El Salvador. It also documented that Mexico passed a new law giving its government wide powers to access citizens' data without a court order. By the time the report came out, only one of 16 US host cities had published a plan that HRW considered adequate for protecting visitors' rights. HRW set 11 May as the deadline for the other 15 to catch up. As of 1 May, none had done so.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If 15 of 16 host cities remain without adequate human rights plans on 12 May, the formal non-compliance creates a documented record that rights groups, plaintiff lawyers, and foreign governments can cite in any subsequent incident involving a World Cup visitor and ICE enforcement.

  • Consequence

    The Trump Peace Prize / ICE Truce refusal juxtaposition documented in the HRW report will recur in every media framing of the tournament's governance failures, tying Infantino's re-election campaign to a specific documented contradiction.

First Reported In

Update #9 · Iran's Pearson test

Human Rights Watch· 1 May 2026
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Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
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Brazil
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United States
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Mexico
Mexico
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Norwegian Football Federation
Norwegian Football Federation
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