
Partey Visa Ban Upheld as Ghana Face Panama in World Cup Opener
A Canadian federal court has rejected Ghana’s emergency appeal, leaving midfielder Thomas Partey barred from the country and casting a legal and diplomatic shadow over the Black Stars’ Group L debut in Toronto.
The 2026 FIFA World Cup’s first major off-pitch controversy reached its legal conclusion just hours before Ghana’s opening match against Panama, as a Canadian federal judge dismissed an injunction request that would have allowed midfielder Thomas Partey to enter the country. Partey, who faces ongoing criminal charges of rape and sexual assault in the United Kingdom — charges he denies — was deemed inadmissible under Canadian immigration law. Viewed from Ottawa, the ruling reinforces a principle that even the commercial and diplomatic machinery of a global tournament cannot override domestic legal thresholds. For Ghana, the absence of one of their most experienced players has dominated the narrative in the run-up to a fixture already freighted with consequence.
From Accra, the response has been a blend of defiance and rallying unity. President John Dramani Mahama, Vice President Jane Naana Opoku-Agyemang and former Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia each issued public messages of support, while the government secured free-to-air broadcast rights to ensure every Ghanaian could watch the match. Head coach Carlos Queiroz, speaking in Toronto, insisted his squad was ready to “play with the cards I have in front of me” and called on the diaspora to act as a twelfth man. Teammates, including midfielder Kwasi Sibo, framed victory as a tribute to their absent colleague. Yet the pressure is acute: Ghana have not won any of their last seven international fixtures and face a Panama side ranked 39 places above them in the FIFA standings.
Panama arrive in Canada buoyed by a strong qualifying campaign and the fervour of a travelling support that greeted the squad in Toronto with what local media described as an unprecedented mobilisation of La Marea Roja. For the Canaleros, this is only their second World Cup appearance after a group-stage exit in 2018, and head coach Thomas Christiansen has cautioned against underestimating any opponent. Analysts in Latin America note that Panama view this match as their most realistic path to points in a Group L that also contains England and Croatia. The fixture is the first-ever senior meeting between the two nations, adding an element of unpredictability that both camps acknowledge.
Looking ahead, the stakes extend well beyond a single result. For Ghana, defeat would leave them needing to take points from European heavyweights to avoid an early exit, intensifying scrutiny on Queiroz’s rebuilding project. For tournament organisers and future host nations, the Partey case sets a precedent: immigration integrity will not be subordinated to sporting convenience. As the Black Stars and Panama take the field at BMO Field, the match will test not only two ambitious squads but also the uneasy intersection of law, diplomacy and the world’s most-watched sporting event.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
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For Ghana, the opening match against Panama is a non-negotiable imperative. The Black Stars, buoyed by high-level political support and a unified squad, are determined to erase past disappointments and start their World Cup campaign with a victory. Coach Queiroz has declared the fixture a must-win, insisting that only results matter.
The Ghana-Panama clash is framed as a tightly balanced opening duel in a difficult group. Analysts note Ghana's recent struggles and the weight of expectation, while Panama is portrayed as a steadily improving side. The match is seen as a crucial but unpredictable test for both teams' ambitions to advance.
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