FIFA forces Haiti to remove revolutionary history images from its World Cup jersey

Tribune Editorial Staff
June 11, 2026

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti--Haiti’s long-awaited return to the FIFA World Cup has taken on added cultural significance after FIFA required the national team’s jersey to be modified before the start of the tournament, removing historical imagery connected to Haiti’s revolutionary past.

The original jersey, designed by Colombian manufacturer Saeta, reportedly featured silhouettes inspired by the 1803 Battle of Vertières, the decisive battle in which Haitian forces defeated the French army and cleared the way for Haiti to become the world’s first free Black republic.

The imagery was positioned on the shirt’s right hip alongside the Haitian flag and had already been worn by players during pre-tournament friendly matches against New Zealand on June 2 and Peru on June 5 in Florida. However, ahead of Haiti’s World Cup opener, FIFA determined that elements of the design could fall under its restrictions on political, religious or personal messages on playing kits.

Saeta confirmed that it complied with FIFA’s requested modifications, while maintaining that the design was intended as a tribute to Haitian history and identity, not as a political statement.

The modified jersey retains Haiti’s national colors of blue, white and red, with red collars and sleeves and the Haitian football federation badge at the center of the shirt. Official World Cup portrait photos have already shown Haiti players wearing the altered design.

The decision has drawn wider attention because Haiti is returning to the men’s FIFA World Cup for the first time since 1974, ending a 52-year absence from football’s biggest stage. The country’s qualification itself carried deep symbolic weight, coming as Haiti continues to face serious political, social and economic challenges at home while its diaspora remains strongly connected to the national team.

Haiti opens its Group C campaign against Scotland at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, before facing Brazil and Morocco.

For many Caribbean observers, the issue raises a broader question about the line between political messaging and national history. The Battle of Vertières is not a party slogan or campaign message. It is a defining event in Haiti’s national story and a milestone in the history of Black liberation, independence and Caribbean resistance.

At the same time, FIFA’s position is rooted in equipment rules that restrict political, religious and personal messages or images on team kits. The governing body has applied such rules in other cases involving national symbols, causes and historical or political references.

The controversy has therefore placed Haiti at the center of a larger conversation about how international sport regulates identity, memory and culture, especially for countries whose history is inseparable from struggle and liberation.

Haiti’s players will now take the field in a modified kit, but the discussion surrounding the original design has already amplified global attention on the team, its history and its return to the World Cup.

For Haiti and the wider Caribbean, the moment is about more than a jersey. It is about representation, pride and the continuing effort of Caribbean nations to tell their stories on their own terms, even on the most regulated stages in world sport.

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