For decades, the image of a Somali referee being paid a World Cup fee would have seemed as unlikely as a snowstorm in Mogadishu. But this week, Fifa announced that a match official from the Horn of Africa nation will receive his full, on-time tournament payment, a direct result of governance reforms spearheaded by British football authorities. The move marks a sea change in how football’s global governing body handles payments to officials from developing nations, where corruption and administrative delays have long left referees waiting months for wages that are a lifeline for their families.
The referee, whose name has not been disclosed for security reasons, will earn £35,000 for his role at the 2026 World Cup in North America. That sum, while modest by Premier League standards, represents more than 20 years of median income in Somalia. The payment is being processed through a new centralised system, introduced after pressure from the UK’s Football Association and the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. The system requires Fifa to deposit all match fees into an escrow account 30 days before the tournament, with funds released directly to officials’ bank accounts within 48 hours of their final match.
Behind the headline lies a story of grinding, years-long negotiation. The reforms were prompted by a 2022 investigation by The Guardian and the Bureau of Investigative Journalism, which revealed that referees from 14 African nations had not been paid for the 2018 World Cup. In one case, a referee from Sudan waited 14 months for his fee, by which time he had lost his home to eviction. The UK government, using its leverage as a permanent member of the Fifa Council, made payment transparency a condition of its continued support for the organisation’s governance restructuring.
Sarah Jenkins, a former referee who now works with the grassroots campaign PayRefs, called the development “a victory for kitchen-table economics”. She said: “Referees in Somalia, South Sudan, Yemen, they are not doing it for the glamour. They are doing it to feed their kids. This reform means a mother in Mogadishu can buy milk tonight, not in six months when inflation has eaten the value of the cheque.” The broader impact on regional inequality is significant. The new system also covers fees for assistant referees and fourth officials, many of whom come from countries where a single World Cup payment can support extended families for a year.
Not everyone is satisfied. The reforms only apply to World Cup and Confederations Cup tournaments, leaving hundreds of lower-tier international matches still subject to opaque payment systems. The African Football Confederation has yet to adopt similar measures, despite repeated calls from the FIFPro players’ union. There are also concerns about the sustainability of the escrow model. Fifa’s president, Gianni Infantino, has resisted expanding the system to include grassroots referee development funds, arguing that such costs should be borne by national associations.
But for now, the Somali referee represents a tangible breakthrough. His fee is small in the grand scheme of football’s billions, but it is a sign that transparency can prevail. As one official put it: “If a ref from a country without a postal service can get his cheque on time, anyone can.” The question is whether the momentum of UK-led reform will carry beyond one tournament, or whether the real economy of football governance remains a game of two halves.









