Canada refused entry to Ghana midfielder Thomas Partey ahead of his side's opener against Panama in Toronto on Wednesday 17 June, citing pending sexual-offence charges in the United Kingdom that have produced no conviction 1. Canadian immigration law permits inadmissibility without a foreign conviction, a discretionary standard the government applied here. The Ghana Football Association and foreign ministry called the decision "high-handed and extremely unfair" and sought a review; Partey remains available for Ghana's United States-hosted matches 2.
FIFA gave the line it has used all tournament: "Immigration decisions rest with host governments, not FIFA" 3. The stance is now stress-tested across two host nations and three roles. United States Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the federal border agency, barred a FIFA-appointed Somali referee at Miami and detained an Iraqi striker for seven hours at Chicago O'Hare . Canada has now used domestic law to keep a starting international out of an opener.
The instruments differ but reach the same outcome. Canada's inadmissibility-without-conviction rule and CBP's vetting discretion are separate legal mechanisms, each producing a sovereign border decision FIFA cannot reverse. FIFA's hosting agreements secured stadium access, not personnel entry. A governing body that controls the fixtures does not control the frontiers its players must cross to reach them, and every nation with a player facing unresolved proceedings abroad now carries that selection risk into the tournament.
