As the 2025 World Cup hosted in the United States heads into its highly anticipated final match at New Jersey’s MetLife Stadium, a simmering debate over the display of Palestinian flags has emerged as one of the tournament’s most contentious off-pitch stories, drawing new attention to inconsistent political policies within global football governance. What has become clear over the course of the competition is that the Palestinian flag has become both one of the most widely visible symbols of solidarity in stadium stands and one of the most frequently targeted by venue security personnel.
Multiple supporters who brought Palestinian flags to matches have told Middle East Eye that they were stopped by security officials during venue entry and ordered to remove the flags or face confiscation, a move that directly contradicts FIFA’s own public regulations that permit all national flags to be brought into World Cup stadiums. These confrontations have occurred amid a groundswell of grassroots solidarity from fans of Arab nations competing in the tournament, who have turned out in large numbers to display Palestinian flags throughout the stands, even though Palestine is not a participating team in this year’s competition.
For pro-Palestine activists and organizers, these repeated incidents are not isolated mistakes, but rather a reflection of what they frame as growing systemic scrutiny of Palestinian identity in public spaces across the U.S., even as popular global support for Palestinian statehood and an end to the war in Gaza has become increasingly visible. As the tournament prepares for its final showdown, two major questions remain unanswered: whether venue authorities will allow Palestinian flags to be displayed openly in the stands of MetLife Stadium, and whether Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu – who faces widespread accusations of war crimes for his government’s military campaign in Gaza – will attend the final as previously rumored.
Maisa Morrar, a Palestinian-American community organizer based in Oakland, argues that FIFA itself bears ultimate responsibility for the clashes between security guards and flag-bearing fans. She explains that conflicting pre-tournament messaging from the global football governing body over whether Palestinian flags would be allowed created unnecessary confusion, which in turn emboldened security staff to confront supporters displaying the symbol. “We were seeing reports that FIFA was allowing the Palestine flag in stadiums, and my first thought was, why was that even a question?” Morrar said in an interview. “People bring their national flags to World Cup matches all the time; it was bizarre that there was ever any question over whether Palestinians could fly their flag.”
For many attendees, those unclear policies quickly turned into on-the-ground conflict. Omar Dreidi, a Palestinian-American from Southern California and an NBA player agent with past connections to FIFA through the FIFA Masters program, was confronted by security while attending a match at California’s Levi’s Stadium. He told Middle East Eye that security approached him directly and said he was not permitted to display his Palestinian flag.
Dreidi, who is familiar with FIFA’s official rules and maintains connections within the organization, refused to comply. A viral video he posted to the social platform X immediately after the confrontation shows him draped in the Palestinian flag, challenging security: “If you’re going to make me take down my Palestinian flag, then make that person take off their keffiyeh,” he says in the footage, pointing to another supporter who had stepped in to defend him. After an extended back-and-forth, the security guard radioed his supervisors before returning to inform Dreidi he could keep the flag. “When he told me I could keep it, he said ‘you can chill now’ – and I told him, you were the one who came and harassed me,” Dreidi recounted.
The incident drew immediate solidarity from nearby spectators, with two Algerian fans stepping in to support Dreidi, and another attendee beginning to record the interaction. “It shows acts of solidarity and pride and love, and I was really grateful for those two guys,” Dreidi said. After he shared his experience online, Dreidi received dozens of messages from other fans across the tournament reporting identical confrontations, many of whom had their Palestinian flags confiscated by security. “I felt bad because I wish they knew their rights under FIFA rules,” he said. He has since urged all Palestinian supporters attending matches to familiarize themselves with tournament regulations, document all interactions with security if possible, and says he has connected with FIFA’s legal team to offer support to fans facing similar harassment.
Middle East Eye reached out to FIFA for official comment on the incidents ahead of publication, but did not receive a response before the article went to press.
The disputes over Palestinian flags are unfolding against a backdrop of broader criticism of the current World Cup and FIFA’s leadership on multiple human rights fronts. While FIFA markets the tournament as a global celebration of football and cross-national unity, campaigners and activists have accused the governing body of failing to uphold those stated principles when confronted with ongoing war, human rights abuses and political expression.
Critics have repeatedly highlighted what they call FIFA’s deeply inconsistent approach to global conflicts. In 2022, Russia was fully suspended from international football within days of launching its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. Yet repeated calls from the Palestinian Football Association and dozens of global human rights organizations to suspend Israel over its ongoing military campaign in Gaza, which has killed more than 34,000 Palestinians to date, the majority of them women and children, have not resulted in any similar action from FIFA.
FIFA has also faced new scrutiny over its increasingly close public alignment with former U.S. President Donald Trump, who has made multiple high-profile appearances at tournament events. Rights groups have raised alarm over FIFA’s willingness to align itself with a political leader accused of undermining international law and domestic civil liberties, particularly after FIFA awarded Trump its annual FIFA Presidential Award earlier in the tournament.
For many Palestinian supporters, these broader institutional controversies have framed the flag disputes as part of a larger pattern of institutional bias, rather than isolated errors by individual security staff.
For Dreidi, however, the tournament has also highlighted football’s unique power to unite diverse supporters across national and political divides. “We have many problems with FIFA – the peace prize for Trump, the way they allow Israel to play without any sanctions, we have a lot of problems – but put that aside for a second,” he said. “The World Cup is a really unique sporting event because it brings people together. I see the pride and the joy it brings in people.”
When asked what message he wants the global public to take from the widespread display of Palestinian flags at the tournament, Dreidi said it boils down to a simple demand for equality and inclusion. “I just want everybody to know that the Palestinian flag, like any other nation in the world, is allowed in stadiums,” he said. “We’re allowed to wear our jerseys, we’re allowed to fly our flag high, and be prideful. I knew that going in.”
For Morrar, attending the tournament was about far more than watching football. She said it felt critical to be present at a major U.S.-hosted global event at this historic moment, and to witness the widespread grassroots solidarity firsthand. “It felt really important for me to go and see the camaraderie and the solidarity, not just for the games but also for us as Palestinians,” she said. She added that fans from dozens of competing nations repeatedly approached her to express solidarity, ask to hold her Palestinian flag, and join chants in support of Palestinian liberation. “Everywhere we’ve gone, people have been so receptive to the flag, and I think a large part of that has to do with the genocide in Gaza,” Morrar said. “The message I’ve fully received and witnessed is that the people are really standing with Palestine, and that at the end of the day it’s always about people’s struggles and their liberation.”









