World Cup
BREAKING: At last FIFA’s Axe falls on South Africa!

The FIFA Disciplinary Committee has sanctioned the South African Football Association (SAFA) for fielding an ineligible player, Teboho Mokoena, in the 2026 FIFA World Cup™ preliminary match against Lesotho played on 21 March 2025.
In a statement released on Monday, FIFA confirmed that South Africa breached Article 19 of the FIFA Disciplinary Code (FDC) and Article 14 of the FIFA World Cup 2026™ Preliminary Competition Regulations by featuring the player, who was not eligible for selection.
As a result, FIFA has awarded the match to Lesotho with a 3–0 scoreline, overturning the original result.
In addition to the forfeiture, SAFA has been ordered to pay a fine of CHF 10,000, while Teboho Mokoena has received an official warning from the world football governing body.
According to FIFA, the parties involved have been notified of the decision and have ten days to request a motivated decision, which, if requested, will be published on legal.fifa.com.
The ruling, however, remains subject to appeal before the FIFA Appeal Committee, in line with the relevant provisions of the Disciplinary Code.
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World Cup
Sport and politics: The Moroccan model

BY SAID SHEHATA
The golden rule in sport is that politics does not intervene in its affairs, since it should be neutral and the sphere of people regardless of their political affiliations.
However, there have been cases of breaking this law, such as Russia and Israel. For example, Russian football clubs and national teams have been suspended from all competitions by FIFA and UEFA.
Another example is that Spain threatened to boycott the 2026 World Cup if Israel qualifies after a UN Commission of Inquiry stated that Israel had committed genocide against Palestinians in Gaza.
While this rule stands for majority of cases, there is a mutual influence between sport and politics in its general sense. The Moroccan case will illustrate how sport and politics can impact each other.
King Mohamed VI, the king of Morocco, and the Moroccan state have a vision and plan to develop sport.
Sport is seen as a tool for development, social cohesion, improve Morocco image internationally and satisfy people’s aspirations who love sport, especially football.
The belief of the political leadership has been materialized in plans and projects which helped Morocco to be one of the hosts of the 20230 football World Cup.
King Mohammed VI at the inauguration of “the Mohammed VI Football Complex”.
The Moroccan government put 8.7 billion dollars’ investment in the railways sector to improve the transport network. This investment has created jobs and brought another source for the economy to flourish.
One just needs about 2 hours to go from Casablanca to Tangier on the new fast train. In addition, the Moroccan prime minister Aziz Akhannouch said that the Moroccan airports will be receiving 80 million passengers by 2030 from 38 million at present. This shows more investments in airports to be up to the event in 2030.
Moreover, more investments assigned to develop and build new stadiums. For example, the Ibn Batouta stadium in Tangier was renovated and its seating capacity increased to host 75,000 spectators.
Aerial view of the completely remodeled Grand Stade de Tanger
It was done according to the highest standards and by local experts. Morocco will build near Casablanca a huge stadium which can host 115,000 fans and it will be ready before the 2030 world cup and it might be the venue for the final match.
Furthermore, Morocco established the ‘Mohamed VI Football Complex’ in 2019 to be home for national football teams of all ages in order to help sportsmen and women to train and focus before competitions.
Part of the plan to improve the level of football is to help developing young talents to feed national teams.
Omar Khyari, an advisor to the president of the Royal Moroccan Football Federation told me that this was the reason behind establishing the king Mohammed VI Football Academy in 2009, which was inaugurated in 2010 by the king.
The purpose of the academy is to discover, train and develop young footballers for professional clubs and the national teams.
The Moroccan government believes in equality between men and women and this belief was reflected in laws to protect women rights as well as their right to sport.
Morocco invested in women domestic league and it has a very good female football national team. This team reached the final in both 2022 and 2024 Women African Cup.
Morocco will host the competition in 2026 and its women national team has a big chance to win it this time.
It can be added that there are 3000 playgrounds all over Morocco, where ordinary people in cities and countryside can play football.
The Moroccan vision which has been translated in plans and investments is a clear manifestation of how politics influences sport on different levels from investments to ensuring all facilities are available and ready to have successful sport.
By the same token, sport influences politics as well as the economic and social aspects of people’s lives.
For example, investments in infrastructures, such as railways and airports have created thousands of jobs and could attract foreign direct investment. Investors are looking to put their money where logistics can help them to make profit.
In addition, more tourists will come to Morocco because of its sport image as well as the different comfortable facilities to make visitors’ visit enjoyable.
In 2024 tourism contributed 11.2 billion dollars to the economy and 17.4 million tourists visited Morocco according to the ministry of tourism.
The ministry thinks that this number of tourists will be about 76 million by 2030. Tourism is the second source of foreign currency in Morocco. It is also estimated that the World Cup will add 1.5 billion dollars to the Moroccan economy.
Furthermore, sport, particularly football, unites Moroccans and this can be seen in football matches. Families come to support the national team and this was clear during the Moroccan- Niger match for the qualification of the 2026 world cup and Morocco qualified after winning that match. Football brings people together.
Satisfaction of people through football could strengthen the regime legitimacy, since the political leadership provides people of things they like.
It can be argued that a vision accompanied by a plan can make a difference. The Moroccan vision for sport, especially football was translated into plans to invest in infrastructure and human beings.
Those investments by the Moroccan government helped Morocco to be one of the hosts of the 2030 Football World Cup.
Focusing on and investing in football will pay back on political, economic and social levels.
* Dr. Said Shehata, Lecturer in Middle East Politics and International Relations-
-Ahram
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World Cup
BREAKING! Colombian President Barred from Entering U.S., Will Miss World Cup Despite His Country’s Qualification

The United States have indicated that they will revoke the Colombian president visa. Colombian President Gustavo Petro will be unable to attend next year’s FIFA World Cup — to be hosted mainly in the United States — after Washington announced the cancellation of his U.S. visa following his participation in a pro-Palestinian protest in New York.
The U.S. State Department said on Friday that it had decided to revoke President Petro’s visa over what it described as “reckless and incendiary actions.” The decision effectively bars the Colombian leader from entering the United States, one of the three host nations for the 2026 World Cup, where Colombia recently secured qualification.
In a fiery address to demonstrators outside the United Nations headquarters in Manhattan, Petro urged American soldiers to “disobey” President Donald Trump’s orders in relation to the Gaza war and called for the creation of an international force “bigger than that of the United States” to “liberate Palestinians.”
“From here, from New York, I ask all the soldiers of the army of the United States not to point their guns at people. Disobey the orders of Trump. Obey the orders of humanity,” Petro said in Spanish.
His comments drew swift backlash in Washington, with officials branding them a direct incitement against the U.S. government. “We will revoke Petro’s visa due to his reckless and incendiary actions,” the State Department posted on X (formerly Twitter).
It was unclear whether the Colombian president remained in New York at the time of the announcement. His office and Colombia’s foreign ministry did not immediately respond to media requests for comment.
The visa revocation comes as a blow to diplomatic ties between Bogotá and Washington. It also means President Petro will not be able to attend the 2026 World Cup, which will be co-hosted by the U.S., Mexico, and Canada — a tournament in which Colombia’s national team will now compete without their country’s leader in attendance.
Petro, Colombia’s first leftist president and a staunch critic of Israel’s military campaign in Gaza, had earlier accused President Trump during his U.N. address of being “complicit in genocide.” He also called for criminal proceedings over U.S. missile strikes on suspected drug-trafficking boats in the Caribbean.
Relations between the two countries have been uneasy since Trump’s return to the White House in January. Petro had initially refused to allow U.S. deportation flights to land in Colombia as part of Washington’s immigration crackdown, sparking a diplomatic spat before later reversing the decision.
The latest development further strains the historically close U.S.-Colombia partnership, leaving questions over future cooperation — and casting a political shadow over Colombia’s moment of sporting triumph on the global stage.
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World Cup
‘We’ll Move It’: Trump Threatens to Shift World Cup Games from Seattle, San Francisco

President Donald Trump would look to move matches for the 2026 World Cup if he deems any of the U.S. cities planning to serve as hosts to be unsafe.
Speaking Thursday about the event, which will be co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico from June 11 to July 19, Trump was asked by reporters in the Oval Office specifically about games in Seattle and San Francisco.
“Well, that’s an interesting question … but we’re going to make sure they’re safe,” he said. “(Seattle and San Francisco are) run by radical left lunatics who don’t know what they’re doing.”
Six matches are scheduled to be played at Seattle’s Lumen Field and six are set for Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., about an hour’s drive from San Francisco.
World Cup matters are overseen by FIFA, which determined the game sites and would figure to be in charge of any changes. However, Trump has a close working relationship with FIFA president Gianni Infantino.
Trump cited his policies as helping make the country safer ahead of the World Cup. He sent the National Guard into Washington, D.C., last month to deal with what he called a “crime emergency,” and he subsequently said that the move resulted in the city having “no crime.”
He said Thursday, “As you probably know, we’re going into Memphis and we’re going into some other cities. Very soon we’re going into Chicago. It will be safe for the World Cup. If I think it isn’t safe, we’ll move into a different city, absolutely. It’s actually a very fair question.
“If I think it’s not safe, we’re going to move it out of that city. So if any city we think is going to be even a little bit dangerous for the World Cup, or for the (2028) Olympics, you know where they have Olympic overthrow right, but for the World Cup in particular, because they’re playing in so many cities, we won’t allow it. We’ll move it around a little bit. But I hope that’s not going to happen.”
The draw for the World Cup, which will feature 48 teams, is scheduled for Dec. 5 in Washington, D.C.
-Reuters
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