The 2026 FIFA World Cup has produced unforgettable football, but it has also been overshadowed by controversies that have stretched far beyond the game itself. The latest involves French captain Kylian Mbappé, Paraguay senator Celeste Amarilla, and a racism row that has escalated from inflammatory social media posts to official government statements, FIFA condemnation, and even a criminal investigation in France.

What began as a bitter reaction to Paraguay’s World Cup exit has now become another reminder that football still struggles with an opponent it has been trying to defeat for decades: racism.
A World Cup Defeat Turned Into A Bitter and Racist Tirade
The controversy unfolded after France edged past Paraguay 1-0 in the Round of 16, with Mbappé scoring the winning penalty to send Les Bleus into the quarter-finals.
Instead of the post-match conversation focusing on Paraguay’s impressive tournament run or France’s qualification, attention quickly shifted to a series of social media posts by Paraguayan senator Celeste Amarilla. Targeting Mbappé personally, she mocked his Cameroonian heritage, questioned his French identity, and attacked his appearance, upbringing and education with remarks that were widely condemned as racist.
Her comments did not appear in isolation either. Even before kickoff, former Paraguayan goalkeeper José Luis Chilavert had controversially referred to France as “a team from Africa,” adding further fuel to an already uncomfortable conversation about race and national identity.
Mbappé Refused To Stay Silent, Rightfully So
Rather than ignoring the abuse, Mbappé responded directly. Calling Amarilla “unworthy” of holding public office, he argued that her remarks had overshadowed Paraguay’s inspiring World Cup campaign. Instead of celebrating a nation that exceeded expectations on football’s biggest stage, he said the global conversation had become about one politician’s racism.
It was a response that resonated well beyond football. Mbappé did not simply defend himself; he highlighted how prejudice can erase the achievements of an entire team and country within hours. Ironically, Paraguay’s memorable World Cup run suddenly became secondary to a controversy entirely of one senator’s making.
The Backlash Was Immediate
The condemnation came quickly and from almost every direction.
Paraguay’s government publicly distanced itself from Amarilla’s comments, stressing that they did not represent either the country’s values or its people.
FIFA President Gianni Infantino also issued a statement standing firmly with Mbappé, reiterating that racism has no place in football and calling on the football community to continue fighting discrimination together.
France closed ranks around its captain. President Emmanuel Macron voiced his support, Sports Minister Marina Ferrari condemned the remarks, while the French Football Federation described the comments as completely unacceptable before referring the matter to French prosecutors. French authorities have since opened an investigation into whether the senator’s posts amount to aggravated public insult or incitement to hatred, offences that could carry criminal penalties under French law.
Meanwhile, Amarilla deleted the original posts and later published an open letter saying she regretted using similar insults against Mbappé because she herself had experienced racism as a mixed-race woman. However, the apology came with conditions. She also demanded that Mbappé apologise to her, accused him of “gender-based violence” over his public response, and threatened legal action if he refused.
Football Still Has A Racism Problem
While this particular controversy involves a politician rather than supporters inside a stadium, it reflects a pattern football knows all too well.
Over the years, players including Vinícius Júnior, Romelu Lukaku, Bukayo Saka, Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho and Dani Alves have all endured racist abuse in different forms. Some incidents have come from fans, others from public figures, and increasingly, many unfold online where hateful rhetoric can spread globally within minutes.
That is perhaps what makes this case particularly striking. The remarks did not come anonymously from behind a keyboard. They came from an elected senator whose words inevitably carried political weight.
When Politics Overshadows Football
One of the saddest aspects of this episode is what it stole from the tournament itself. Paraguay’s World Cup journey deserved to be remembered for its fearless performances and remarkable run. France’s qualification should have sparked conversations about Mbappé’s leadership and another clinical display under pressure. Instead, both narratives were pushed aside by racism.
Football has spent years promoting campaigns against discrimination, filling stadiums with anti-racism messages and insisting the sport belongs to everyone regardless of race or background. Those efforts matter, but moments like these show they remain a work in progress.
Perhaps the biggest takeaway is not simply that Mbappé answered back. It is that silence is no longer the default response. Increasingly, footballers are choosing to confront racism publicly, and institutions are being forced to respond just as publicly. Vinicius Jr., for example has called out the racism in the field
The beautiful game cannot control every hateful remark made beyond the touchline. But how quickly those remarks are condemned, and how firmly the football world stands behind those targeted, says just as much about the sport as anything that happens during ninety minutes on the pitch.
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