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FIFA Clears VAR Official After Televised 'OK' Gesture Draws White‑power Allegations

The governing body found no breach after reviewing the clip and Mr Evans’s denial, a result that highlights the difficulty of judging intent from a single televised moment.

Overview

  • A broadcast cut to the VAR room during Germany’s 7-1 win showed Australian support VAR official Shaun Evans briefly making an upside‑down 'OK' hand shape that viewers said resembled a sign linked to white supremacists.
  • The image circulated widely on social media and prompted the anti‑discrimination group Fare Network to call for Evans to be removed from the World Cup officiating panel.
  • Evans issued a statement saying the motion was an "involuntary, subconscious twitch" and that he repeated the movement while holding a pen, denying any intentional message or affiliation.
  • FIFA’s independent Disciplinary Committee reviewed the footage, took Evans’s statement into account, and announced it found no evidence of a breach of the FIFA Disciplinary Code, leaving him free to continue officiating.
  • The episode forced broadcasters to change how they show VAR teams on air and underlined a larger tension: the 'OK' sign has benign uses but was co‑opted by extremists, so single clips now trigger fast public and institutional scrutiny.