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18th February 2017
02:36pm GMT

Yorke received the stamp on his passport after playing a football legends charity match in Tehran in 2015, held to raise money for sufferers of multiple sclerosis.
Luis Figo, Roberto Carlos, Fabio Cannavaro, Marcel Desailly and Edgar Davids also featured in the game.
Richard Keys, who had worked alongside the United club ambassador the previous evening on beIN Sports, tweeted his dismay about the situation.
https://twitter.com/richardajkeys/status/832533362346700800
Sky Sports News reporter Kaveh Solhekol later also said that the 45-year-old had been "denied entry" to the United States.
https://twitter.com/SkyKaveh/status/832606086238785536
And now Yorke has had his say, expressing his shock and sadness.
"I couldn’t quite believe what was happening" Yorke told the Sun.
"I have lost count of the number of times I have been to America. I love the country, yet I was being made to feel like a criminal. "I had bought my ticket and checked in and was about to get on the flight when I was stopped by two officials. I thought, ‘What is happening here?’ They told me there was a visa problem and a red flag had come up against my name because of an Iranian stamp in my passport.
"I went there to play in a legends match to open a stadium and didn’t even stay overnight. "The two officials told me if I got on the flight I would simply be deported back to Qatar once I arrived in the States. I tried to explain I didn’t even live in Qatar and was just trying to get to my home in the Caribbean."Yorke is from Trinidad and Tobago, and played in England for almost 20 years, starting his career with Aston Villa. He joined United in 1998 and won three Premier League titles, the FA Cup and the Champions League. Yorke later had stints with Blackburn, Birmingham City and Sunderland, and a spell with Sydney FC in Australia.
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