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South Africa's World Cup departure delayed in visa 'debacle'

The team had been due to leave on a charter flight for their training base in the Mexican city of Pachuca but that was postponed while the South African Football Association tried to sort the paperwork.

Reuters
Johannesburg, South Africa
Sun, May 31, 2026 Published on May. 31, 2026 Published on 2026-05-31T18:29:59+07:00

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A woman poses with the image of Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo during an exhibition of the Panini World Cup Album at the Reforma Avenue in Mexico City on May 11, 2026, one month ahead of the opening match of the FIFA World Cup 2026 between Mexico and South Africa. A woman poses with the image of Portuguese footballer Cristiano Ronaldo during an exhibition of the Panini World Cup Album at the Reforma Avenue in Mexico City on May 11, 2026, one month ahead of the opening match of the FIFA World Cup 2026 between Mexico and South Africa. (AFP/Alfredo Estrella)

S

outh Africa failed to depart for the 2026 World Cup as planned on Sunday after some players and officials were yet to receive visas 11 days ahead of their tournament-opening match against co-hosts Mexico due to be watched by millions worldwide.

The team had been due to leave on a charter flight for their training base in the Mexican city of Pachuca but that was postponed while the South African Football Association tried to sort the paperwork.

"This SAFA travel and visa debacle is embarrassing and grossly unfair towards the players and coaching staff," said Sports Minister Gayton McKenzie in a post on X.

"I have informed SAFA that I need a report and action must be taken against those responsible for this mess. We are being made to look like fools."

The football association said in a statement that the team was unable to fly in the morning as planned due to "challenges regarding visas" for some players and officials.

"SAFA is working around the clock to ensure that the team travels to Mexico City as soon as possible," it added, without giving more details of the specific problems.

"We remain committed to ensuring that the team’s preparations for the tournament remain on track and in the meantime, Bafana Bafana will continue to train in Johannesburg until departure."

An emergency SAFA meeting was planned for Sunday night.

South Africa kick off the World Cup in Mexico City on June 11, and are appearing at the global finals for the first time since they were hosts themselves in 2010.

An administrative bungle in qualifying almost cost them their place at the finals when their 2-0 victory over Lesotho was overturned after they fielded an ineligible player in Teboho Mokoena, who was suspended for the clash. 

Despite this, they still finished a point ahead of Nigeria and Benin in their qualification pool. 

South Africa also have Group A games against Czech Republic (June 18) in the US city of Atlanta and South Korea (June 24) in Monterrey back in Mexico.

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