Windsor Star

FIFA’s uphill struggle to regain world’s trust

Criminal investigat­ions continue, suitabilit­y of top members in doubt

- ROB HARRIS

MANAMA, BAHRAIN Even after a year under new leadership, FIFA is still pleading with the world: Trust us.

The message is proving as hard to sell as sponsorshi­p of the World Cup.

It’s no wonder. Gianni Infantino arrives at his second congress as FIFA president with his “crisis is over” declaratio­n at last year’s gathering of soccer’s 211 nations looking remarkably outlandish.

Criminal investigat­ions are still exposing shady transactio­ns.

The suitabilit­y of members of the ruling council remains in doubt.

Reforms intended to curb the powers of the president and restore FIFA’s credibilit­y are being eroded.

Against this backdrop, FIFA has been trying to persuade commercial backers to sign up after so many were scared off by the corruption that plagued the Sepp Blatter era.

FIFA’s leadership was able to start its congress week in Bahrain by trumpeting the arrival of Qatar Airways to fill the airline sponsorshi­p category that has been vacant for more than two years. But the deal was anticipate­d given it is the state-owned carrier of the 2022 World Cup hosts.

A true test of the confidence of FIFA’s new hierarchy will come when major internatio­nal corporatio­ns sign up that are not from China, Russia or Qatar — the source of all of FIFA’s new World Cup deals in recent years.

New sponsors in traditiona­l stronghold­s like Japan and the United States have yet to convince shareholde­rs they should partner with a scandal-tainted organizati­on. Many were scared off in 2015 when FIFA’s reputation was shredded by widespread bribery being exposed after high-ranking executives were arrested in Zurich hotel raids.

“We hope that more (sponsors) will come before the end of the year,” FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura told The Associated Press. “That was a strong signal from Qatar Airways to recognize the new leadership of FIFA is working toward restoring the image of FIFA and that there is climate of trust that is really here to push for more partnershi­ps.”

Trust, according to Samoura, also comes through a new generation of officials being elected to the FIFA Council.

“It’s a strong demonstrat­ion that gender empowermen­t,” Samoura said, pointing to Mahfuza Akhter of Bangladesh being elected on Tuesday as Asia’s female representa­tive at FIFA.

It was a surprise result. Moya Dodd, an outspoken critic of corruption and prominent champion of women’s football, lost to Akhter, who couldn’t name the Women’s World Cup holder in a postelecti­on interview. American soccer stars Alex Morgan and Carli Lloyd were among those to express surprise at the setback for Dodd, an Australian lawyer who is still on the Asian Football Confederat­ion executive committee.

“I’m sure she will land on her feet somehow in football,” said Samoura, who was hired last year as FIFA’s first female secretary general. “She has football in her heart and I’m sure that FIFA or another confederat­ion or her home federation will continue to make good use of her skills.”

Those skills were used by a reform committee in 2015 that helped to reshape FIFA following the U.S. Department of Justice indictment­s of soccer officials.

The progress of some reforms, however, appears to have stalled — despite Infantino helping to draft them in the FIFA-appointed advisory panel while he was a presidenti­al candidate.

Power should have drained from the presidency to the CEO-like secretary general, but Infantino has retained a Blatter-like grip on executive authority. A new FIFA Bureau that was not on the reform program now has given more authority to Infantino and the six regional confederat­ion leaders, whose decisions need not be ratified by a 37-strong council that replaced the discredite­d executive committee.

“That can be the appearance,” CONCACAF president Victor Montaglian­i of Canada said, “but I think the collaborat­ions at the council level and the discussion­s are quite healthy. The bureau is there to act in between when the council meets. If there are decisions that are needed on a timely basis for operationa­l issues they have to be made.”

The most recent addition to the bureau and council is Ahmad Ahmad, who ended Issa Hayatou’s 29-year grip on power in Africa in March.

But the FIFA vice-president has unwelcome links to the tainted old regime. Email correspond­ence between Ahmad and an aide to disgraced former FIFA presidenti­al candidate Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar was published by British newspaper The Sunday Times in 2014. The emails from 2010 detailed Ahmad reminding Bin Hammam that he promised money to help Ahmad’s re-election campaign to lead the Madagascar federation. The Bin Hammam aide who Ahmad was emailing was banned for life by the FIFA ethics committee in January for involvemen­t in unethical payments made to soccer officials.

“If it’s your idea, take it, give it,” Ahmad responded vaguely when asked about the payments on Wednesday. “Ask him. Don’t ask me.”

FIFA has lost two officials recently following fresh American revelation­s about wrongdoing.

FIFA audit committee member Richard Lai, an American citizen from Guam, pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy charges related to taking around $1 million in bribes including at least $850,000 from Kuwaiti officials. The cash was to buy influence and help recruit other Asian soccer officials prepared to take bribes, Lai said in court in New York.

Kuwaiti power broker Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah was implicated in the investigat­ion and, despite maintainin­g his innocence, he quit the election to regain his seat on the FIFA Council this week.

Lai is under a formal FIFA ethics investigat­ion and the claims against Sheikh Ahmad will also be scrutinize­d.

 ?? ERIKA SANTELICES/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, are finding it difficult to convince sponsors to trust that the scandals of recent years are now behind them.
ERIKA SANTELICES/AFP/GETTY IMAGES FIFA and its president, Gianni Infantino, are finding it difficult to convince sponsors to trust that the scandals of recent years are now behind them.
 ??  ?? Ahmad Ahmad
Ahmad Ahmad
 ??  ?? Victor Montaglian­i
Victor Montaglian­i

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