
World Cup VAR official investigated over hand gesture linked to white supremacy
FIFA faces calls to remove Australian referee Shaun Evans after a pre-match broadcast captured a sign that anti-discrimination monitors say symbolises 'white power'.
FIFA has opened an investigation and faces mounting pressure to dismiss a video assistant referee after he appeared to make a hand gesture associated with white supremacist movements during the global broadcast of Germany’s opening World Cup match against Curaçao. The incident occurred on Sunday when television cameras cut to the VAR operations room in Dallas, showing Australian official Shaun Evans standing with his right arm at his side, thumb and index finger forming a circle while the remaining three fingers were extended downwards. The Fare Network, FIFA’s own anti-discrimination monitoring partner, swiftly demanded Evans’s removal, describing the sign as a neo-Nazi symbol that has been adopted by far-right groups to signify “white power”.
Viewed from Washington, the gesture has been catalogued since 2019 by the Anti-Defamation League as a hate symbol in certain contexts, though the organisation cautions that the “OK” hand sign retains innocuous meanings. The ambiguity lies at the heart of the controversy: the same configuration can represent the letters “W” and “P”, with the three splayed fingers forming a W and the circled thumb and forefinger together with the arm creating a P. European monitoring bodies, including Fare, argue that the positioning of the hand below the waist and the deliberate framing during a formal introduction sequence strip away any plausible deniability. German press reports note that the moment passed without comment from domestic television commentary, yet within minutes social media platforms were alight with accusations, reflecting an internet culture that parses every frame for coded extremism.
Across the Arabic-language press and in Indian and Southeast Asian outlets, the episode has been framed as a test of FIFA’s anti-racism rhetoric at a tournament already shadowed by earlier controversies, including the deportation of a referee from the United States. Analysts in London observe that the governing body’s initial response has been characteristically cautious: FIFA has acknowledged awareness of the footage and is seeking an explanation from Evans, but has stopped short of suspending him. The Australian official’s camp, meanwhile, has floated the possibility that the gesture was an involuntary movement or a reference to the so-called “circle game”, a juvenile prank in which a participant punches anyone who looks at the hand sign below the waist. This defence has done little to quell the criticism from anti-racism campaigners, who note that the symbol was notoriously flashed by the perpetrator of the 2019 Christchurch mosque attacks during a court appearance.
The affair places FIFA’s disciplinary machinery in an uncomfortable spotlight. The tournament’s organisers have invested heavily in messaging around inclusion and diversity, yet the episode reveals how swiftly a single ambiguous image can undermine that edifice. Should the investigation conclude that Evans intended the gesture as a supremacist signal, his expulsion would be the most high-profile sanction against a match official for ideological misconduct in World Cup history. Even if the inquiry finds no deliberate malice, the incident is likely to prompt a review of the pre-match broadcast protocol that turned a routine technical shot into a global Rorschach test. For now, the VAR room in Dallas has become an unlikely stage for a debate about symbols, intent and the limits of zero-tolerance policies in sport.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 3 languages
An Australian VAR official is under investigation after making a hand gesture on live television that has been linked to white supremacist symbolism. The incident provoked widespread condemnation, with European outlets calling for a thorough investigation and possible sanctions, framing the gesture as a deliberate far-right dog whistle.
An Australian referee faced accusations of flashing a 'white power' sign during a World Cup broadcast, but reports note the gesture’s dual meaning—traditionally an OK sign, later co-opted by the far right. Coverage remains measured and analytical, focusing on the online backlash and the history of the symbol rather than calling for immediate punishment.
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