Human Rights Watch published 'World Cup: 2 Months Out, FIFA and Host Cities Sideline Rights' on 10 April, the most detailed audit of the 11 US host cities to date 1. The headline finding is a count: at least 167,000 people arrested by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the federal immigration enforcement agency, in and around the 11 US host cities between 20 January 2025 and 10 March 2026. Houston accounted for 26,483 arrests, Dallas 22,388, and the Atlanta area 13,985. FIFA has published no enforcement protocol covering any of those three cities.
The enforcement footprint is institutional, not ad hoc. Dallas and Houston have signed 287(g) agreements, the federal-local immigration enforcement partnership programme that deputises municipal police to act as ICE agents. Marietta Police Department, outside Atlanta, joined the scheme in March, extending the same authority into a third host metropolitan area. HRW counts 12 of 16 host cities with no published human rights plan; the four that exist (Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, Vancouver) contain no explicit LGBTQ+ protections in either Texan city.
This report sits on top of a documentary chain HRW had built over the previous month. Its March audit on missing host-city plans flagged the absence; Amnesty International's 31 March 'Humanity Must Win' report introduced a medium-to-high risk classification for fans from the four nations facing US travel bans; Vancouver's police chief had already drawn the operational line between Canadian and US enforcement postures . The April audit fills that documented chain with a number. Todd Lyons, acting director of ICE, told Congress in March that his agency would be a 'key part' of tournament security, which is the institutional position the 167,000 figure now contextualises.
HRW's specific demand is a deadline: all 16 host committees must publish action plans by 11 May, exactly one month before the opener at SoFi Stadium. The deadline is a forcing function. Either committees publish protocols that satisfy a human-rights organisation, or they do not, and that decision becomes part of the public record at the moment the international press corps arrives in the United States.
