Thomas Partey will not be on the pitch when the Black Stars of Ghana kick off their 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign against Panama in Toronto on Wedn

Thomas Partey will not be on the pitch when the Black Stars of Ghana kick off their 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign against Panama in Toronto on Wednesday, June 17.
The 32-year-old midfielder — one of Ghana’s most experienced internationals — has been denied a visa to enter Canada, FIFA confirmed on Friday, June 13, 2026, in a statement that sent shockwaves through the Ghanaian football community and the wider footballing world.
The denial is directly linked to the serious criminal charges Partey is currently facing in the United Kingdom.
Canada’s immigration laws bar entry to individuals charged with certain serious offences, even when no conviction has been recorded.
For Partey — who maintains his innocence and has pleaded not guilty to all charges — that legal threshold has proven to be an insurmountable barrier.
FIFA Confirms: No Role in Visa Decisions
In a statement first published by The Athletic and confirmed to multiple international media outlets, FIFA said: “FIFA can confirm that player Thomas Partey will be unable to travel from Ghana’s team base camp in Boston, USA, to Canada for their first match against Panama on Wednesday, 17 June, as his visa application has been refused by the Canadian government.”
The world governing body was careful to distance itself from the decision, adding that it is not involved in the immigration processes of host countries, including the adjudication of visa applications.
The implication is clear: this was Canada’s call alone, and neither FIFA nor the Ghana Football Association had any authority to intervene.
Partey’s Charges: A Timeline

London’s Metropolitan Police first opened an investigation into Partey in February 2022, following a report of alleged rape.
That investigation gathered momentum over subsequent years and eventually led to formal charges.
On July 4, 2025 — just days after his contract at Arsenal expired — Partey was charged with five counts of rape and one count of sexual assault relating to three women.
The alleged offences are said to have taken place between April 2021 and June 2022, during his time at the Emirates.
He appeared at Southwark Crown Court in London in September 2025, where he pleaded not guilty to all charges.
In February 2026, two further rape charges were brought against him, this time relating to a fourth woman in connection with alleged non-recent offences in 2020.
Partey appeared in court again in April 2026 and entered not guilty pleas to those additional charges as well.
In total, Partey now faces seven counts of rape and one count of sexual assault.
His trial, originally scheduled for November 2, 2026, at Southwark Crown Court, has since been pushed back and is now expected to begin in June 2027 after the court consolidated all charges into a single proceeding.
He was released on bail and, as a condition, cannot contact any of the complainants and must notify police of any international travel.
From Arsenal Star to a Career at Crossroads
Partey joined Arsenal from Atletico Madrid in October 2020 in a transfer worth around £45 million — one of the most expensive signings in Ghanaian football history.
He went on to make 32 appearances for Villarreal after joining the Spanish club on a free transfer in August 2025, following the announcement of the initial charges.
He has 57 caps for the Black Stars and featured in Ghana’s final warm-up match against Wales on June 2, 2026.
A big blow for Ghana in North America
Partey’s absence in Toronto is not merely a tactical inconvenience — it represents a significant emotional and psychological blow to a Ghanaian squad that has pinned much of its midfield identity around his experience and quality.
Ghana are in a difficult Group L alongside England and Croatia, and the Panama opener was widely viewed as their most winnable game of the group stage.
Who are Ghana’s other midfielders at the World Cup?
Ghana will be left with only five midfielders after Partey was denied entry to Canada.
Elisha Owusu of Auxerre started with the former Arsenal midfielder in the international friendly against Wales alongside the highly rated FC Nordsjaelland youngster Caleb Yirenkyi, who will be expected to form a double pivot when the Black Stars face Panama in the opening game.
Kwasi Sibo of Real Oviedo in Spain was Partey’s partner in the run-in of the 2026 FIFA World Cup under Otto Addo.
The combative midfielder stands a chance to also start due to his recent experience.
Augustine Boakye of Saint-Etienne has not been given many chances to test himself but is talented and will welcome any opportunity that will come his way in North America.
What Happens Next for Ghana?
There is, however, a measure of relief for Ghanaian supporters.
Partey remains part of the squad. He was able to secure a United States visa and is currently based with the team at their camp at Bryant University in Rhode Island, where Ghana have been training since arriving in Washington D.C. on June 4.
Critically, Ghana’s two remaining group stage matches are both held on American soil — against England in Foxboro, Massachusetts on June 23, and against Croatia in Philadelphia on June 27.
Subject to no further complications, Partey is eligible to play in both of those fixtures.
The Black Stars’ coaching staff will now be tasked with managing the opening game without him and hoping to have their talisman available for the bigger tests ahead.
A Broader Question for World Cup Hosts
The Partey situation raises a wider question about how World Cup host nations handle athletes who carry active legal cases.
A Canadian immigration official, quoted in reports on the matter, noted that visa denials on these grounds apply to anyone whom a consular officer believes will not comply with the terms and conditions of their visa classification, adding that all visa decisions are made on a case-by-case basis through a holistic evaluation.
The precedent is clear and consistent: Canada does not grant exceptions based on athletic status or global celebrity.
It remains to be seen whether the development will prompt FIFA to revisit how it plans multi-venue tournaments hosted across nations with differing immigration frameworks, particularly when player eligibility could be unevenly affected depending on which country a match falls in.
Partey Maintains His Innocence
It bears repeating, with all the force of journalistic fairness: Thomas Partey has not been convicted of any offence.
He has entered not guilty pleas to every charge brought against him.
His lawyer has stated that he has cooperated fully with investigators and that no further public comment will be made while the case proceeds through the courts.
He is an innocent man in the eyes of the law until any court determines otherwise.
That legal reality, however, does not change the immigration laws of a sovereign nation. Canada has acted within its rights.
And Ghana must now go to battle in Toronto without one of their finest midfielders of a generation.

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