×

Soccer-Ghana’s Partey loses bid to overturn Canadian visa refusal

By Thomson Reuters Jun 16, 2026 | 3:22 PM

By Bhargav Acharya and Divya Rajagopal

TORONTO, June 16 (Reuters) – A Canadian court on Tuesday dismissed an appeal by Ghana midfielder Thomas Partey after he was denied ​entry into the country for his team’s game ‌against Panama at the World Cup.

The Canadian government last week refused a visa for Partey, 33, which led to his lawyers launching a last-minute appeal to the Federal Court in Ottawa. The Black Stars face ‌Panama ​in their Group L match in ⁠Toronto on Wednesday.

In dismissing ⁠the appeal, judge Roger Lafreniere wrote that Partey sought “extraordinary, mandatory interlocutory relief” that would have required Canada to set aside a “lawfully rendered inadmissibility finding and facilitate his entry for ​a specific event.”

Ahead of the verdict, Partey’s lawyer Mackeda Bramwell told Reuters they were hopeful of a positive ⁠outcome. Bramwell said Partey would not ⁠appeal if the judge ruled against him.

She did ​not immediately respond to a Reuters request for comment following ​the judge’s decision.

Former Arsenal midfielder Partey faces allegations of ‌rape and sexual assault in Britain. He has denied the charges.

The U.S. government has granted Partey a visa, but Canada’s immigration officials said that under Canadian law, foreign nationals can ⁠be found inadmissible without a foreign conviction.

“When there are reasonable grounds to believe an act that would trigger inadmissibility has been ⁠committed by an ‌applicant, they can be deemed inadmissible to ⁠Canada,” a spokesperson for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship ​Canada ‌told Reuters.

In Ghana and across Canada’s Ghanaian ​diaspora, Partey’s ⁠visa refusal has led to anger and frustration among the national team’s fans.

Speaking to Reuters on Monday, Akua Mensah, 45, a Canadian with Ghanaian roots, said the decision by the Canadian government was unfortunate.

(Divya Rajagopal in Toronto, editing by Ed Osmond ​and Ken Ferris)