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2026 FIFA World Cup
19APR

Al Jazeera names CAF for $15,000 bond silence

3 min read
11:22UTC

Al Jazeera's 5 May opinion piece named the Confederation of African Football for issuing no statement on US visa bonds of $15,000 per person affecting five qualified African nations.

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Key takeaway

Five African federations have not protested a $15,000-per-person bond their fans cannot afford.

On 5 May, Al Jazeera published an opinion piece naming the Confederation of African Football (CAF, the continental governing body for African football) for its silence on US travel restrictions affecting five qualified African nations: Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Algeria, Tunisia and Cabo Verde. No African federation has publicly protested. The $15,000 visa bond required of nationals from those countries represents roughly three years of average income at the $5,000 annual figure Al Jazeera cited for the affected nations; a family of four needs $60,000 in bonds before flights or accommodation. 1

The bond was imposed in tandem with Trump's June 2025 travel ban , which already bars tourist visas for Iran, Haiti, Senegal and Côte d'Ivoire fans regardless of bond posting. Trump's June 2025 order exempts athletes and officials by name; ordinary supporters from the five bonded nations carry the full $15,000 cost. Algeria's World Cup base camp is in Lawrence, Kansas; the team will travel to a country its own travelling support cannot afford to follow them into.

CAF's silence sits inside a wider African federation pattern of deferring to FIFA on US-side political decisions. The 2010 South Africa tournament was the last World Cup hosted on African soil, and CAF has not since pressed a host-country dispute through CONCACAF or FIFA channels. Five federations would need to coordinate a public protest to make the bond a tournament-level question rather than a consular one, and none has moved.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Five African teams qualified for the World Cup: Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Algeria, Tunisia and Cabo Verde. Their fans must pay a $15,000 bond to get a US visa to see them play, money they have to leave with the US government before they even book flights. That is roughly three years of average income in those countries. The organisation that runs African football, the Confederation of African Football (CAF), has said nothing publicly about this. An Al Jazeera opinion piece on 5 May called this out. Algeria's team base camp is in Kansas. Their fans cannot afford the bond to follow them there.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

CAF's revenue dependency on FIFA creates a structural disincentive for confrontation. The Africa Football Cup of Nations television rights and World Cup slot allocation are both negotiated in a framework where CAF's leverage diminishes if it is seen as an adversarial party. Motsepe's March 2021 election was supported by Infantino; the two have maintained a public alignment on commercial expansion that has delivered financial benefits to African federations.

Senegal (WAFU B zone) and Côte d'Ivoire (WAFU B) have strong bilateral relationships with France, which holds considerable influence over their diplomatic channels; their leverage runs through Paris, not Washington. Algeria (UNAF zone) and Tunisia (UNAF) have stronger bilateral relationships with the EU than with the US. Cabo Verde (WAFU B) is a small federation with no direct US diplomatic leverage. None has the geopolitical weight to force a US consular policy reversal independently.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    With no CAF intervention and no bilateral policy change before the June group stage, travelling African fan support for the five bonded nations will be near zero, affecting the atmosphere at matches involving Senegal, Algeria and Tunisia in particular.

  • Risk

    If a CAF federation uses the match-day silence around Senegal or Algeria to make a public protest (a player gesture or a statement at a post-match press conference), CAF's institutional silence becomes the story rather than the bond policy itself.

First Reported In

Update #10 · Tehran names the players

Al Jazeera· 11 May 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Al Jazeera names CAF for $15,000 bond silence
No African federation has publicly protested a bond requirement that exceeds three years of average income; the continental governing body has chosen silence.
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