FIFA's Disciplinary Committee cleared Australian VAR (Video Assistant Referee) official Shaun Evans, who made an 'OK' hand gesture on a broadcast camera during Germany's 7-1 win over Curacao, accepting his account that the movement was an involuntary twitch 1. FIFA's own discrimination monitor, the official appointed to flag conduct breaching the body's anti-discrimination code, then publicly called for Evans to be removed from the tournament.
One body cleared him; another wants him gone. The contradiction matters less for Evans, whose case turns on a contested reading of a single gesture, than for what it shows about a governing structure issuing two findings that cannot both stand. The discrimination monitor has no power to overrule a disciplinary clearance, so the call reads as a public dissent rather than a binding step.
The split follows the governance row over the withheld offside graphic in the Qatar-Switzerland group match , when FIFA took three hours to explain a VAR decision. Disputed officiating calls and appeals are routine at any World Cup. Harder to defend is a single governing body issuing two findings on the same official within a day.
