Skip to content
You can now search across every topic, entity and event.What's new
2026 FIFA World Cup
16JUL

Iraq striker held seven hours at O'Hare

2 min read
10:33UTC

Iraq forward Aymen Hussein was detained for around seven hours at Chicago O'Hare on 8 June before release, and a team photographer was barred entirely.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Hussein's seven-hour O'Hare hold extends the access-denial pattern from fans and officials to active national-team players.

Iraq forward Aymen Hussein was detained for about seven hours at Chicago O'Hare International Airport on or around Monday 8 June before being released, while an Iraqi team photographer was barred from entry entirely 1. Hussein is a senior striker for the Iraq national team, which did not qualify for the 2026 finals, so the detentions fell outside the tournament field yet inside the same access pattern that has gripped football across the region.

US Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the federal agency deciding entry at the border, gave no public reason for holding Hussein. The detention sits alongside the barring of FIFA-appointed referee Omar Artan at Miami a day earlier and the lock-out of senior Iranian federation staff. The category had already shifted from supporters to officials, after entire blocs of fans from qualified nations were refused entry across the spring .

A national-team player held for seven hours, rather than a fan turned away at a consulate, lands as an operational matter for the host. Iraq's football personnel were travelling for football business and were stopped at the jet bridge regardless. The detention adds a fourth nationality to a week in which the border decided who reached the World Cup.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Aymen Hussein is a professional footballer who plays for the Iraqi national team. Iraq did not qualify for the 2026 World Cup. On 8 June, Hussein and a team photographer arrived at Chicago O'Hare airport, one of the cities hosting World Cup matches. US border officials held Hussein for about seven hours before allowing him through. CBP barred the photographer and turned him back at the gate. Iraq is not on the formal travel-ban list that blocks tourist visas from certain countries, but the US government has run expanded security checks on travellers from a number of Middle Eastern nations since the start of the Trump administration. Hussein and the photographer appear to have been caught in those checks. Because Iraq is not a World Cup participant, there is no FIFA accreditation safety net that could have triggered a diplomatic intervention on their behalf.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Iraq sits in a legally distinct position from Iran or Somalia in the access-denial pattern. Iraqi nationals are not subject to the tourist-visa ban covering 39 countries, but US security vetting for Iraqi nationals involves coordination with multiple intelligence agencies tracing back to the 2003-2011 US military presence and the rise of Iranian-backed militias in post-2014 Iraq.

Travellers from countries with significant Iranian-linked paramilitary presence face additional admissibility scrutiny under national security grounds that CBP officers can apply independently of visa status.

The photographer's outright bar and Hussein's multi-hour detention share a common mechanism: the expedited removal and secondary inspection system, which gives CBP officers broad authority to conduct extended vetting without formal judicial oversight and without disclosing the specific grounds applied.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    If Hussein and the photographer were travelling to attend matches as non-accredited spectators, the incident demonstrates that secondary inspection affects football personnel beyond the accredited participant pool.

  • Consequence

    FIFA and the Arab Football Confederation face pressure to document all access-denial incidents involving football-connected personnel during the tournament window, building a record for post-tournament governance review.

First Reported In

Update #17 · Host turns back a World Cup referee

The National· 9 Jun 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
FIFA
FIFA
FIFA had not opened disciplinary proceedings over the Malvinas banner as of 16 July, continuing a pattern set by its fast reversal of Folarin Balogun's ban while South Africa's appeal over Themba Zwane's ban remained outstanding. The nearest tariff, a CHF 30,000 fine from 2014, remains only a precedent, not a decision.
France
France
France's tournament ended at the semi-final stage for the first time since 2010, beaten 2-0 by Spain in Arlington, and Kylian Mbappe's Golden Boot chances are reduced to Saturday's third-place game alone. The 2022 runners-up now play for bronze rather than a second straight final.
Spain
Spain
Spain reached their first World Cup final since winning the trophy in 2010, beating France 2-0 through goals from Mikel Oyarzabal and Pedro Porro. Sixteen years after their only title, this squad returns to the same stage without the sovereignty politics attached to the other semi-final.
Downing Street (UK Government)
Downing Street (UK Government)
Downing Street said on the record that the Falkland Islanders 'are British with the right to determine their own future,' answering Argentina's vice-president and foreign minister. London rests its case on the islanders' 2013 referendum, not on the fixture, and lodged no formal protest despite the semi-final framing.
Argentina
Argentina
Vice-President Victoria Villarruel called England 'the usurping pirates' before kickoff; midfielder Leandro Paredes said after the 2-1 win that the Falklands 'will always be Argentine'. Argentina's 1994 constitution commits every office-holder to press the Malvinas claim, so a World Cup semi-final was never going to pass without it.
Switzerland
Switzerland
Switzerland reached their first World Cup quarter-final since 1954 and led Argentina before Breel Embolo's second yellow card left them a man down for the last half-hour. They expect the run to raise expectations for the next cycle rather than close a chapter.