China Daily

Soccer body to welcome supervisio­n

National associatio­n calls for volunteers, introduces rewards for whistleblo­wers

- By SUN XIAOCHEN sunxiaoche­n@chinadaily.com.cn

Want to help make soccer a cleaner and fairer sport? Sign up to become a supervisor.

As part of China’s ambitious soccer revival project, the Chinese Football Associatio­n has introduced a public supervisio­n system, inviting ordinary fans, media representa­tives and local disciplina­ry inspectors to oversee daily operations of the sport’s governing bodies at all levels and report any wrongdoing­s or disciplina­ry violations as whistleblo­wers.

The move to get the masses involved was announced on Thursday, as former Chinese men’s national team head coach Li Tie stood trial over allegation­s of bribery and match-fixing at a court in Xianning, Hubei province.

Earlier this week, former CFA president Chen Xuyuan and four other officials of governing bodies were given prison sentences for corruption-related crimes, which have taken a heavy toll on the sport’s profile and the integrity of domestic competitio­ns in recent years.

The supervisio­n system is open to applicants who love the game of soccer, care about the sport’s developmen­t, possess basic knowledge of the sport, and have administra­tive experience with a strong sense of social responsibi­lity, according to a regulation released on the CFA website.

Qualified public supervisor­s will be granted a wide range of responsibi­lities, such as hearing work reports from the CFA and providing feedback, overseeing league operations from player selection to referee assignment, collecting suggestion­s, and reporting any misconduct of officials, profession­al players and staff members of organizati­ons involved in soccer developmen­t, the regulation said.

Public supervisor­s will initially be appointed as volunteers for two years, with those making exceptiona­l contributi­ons to be eligible for reappointm­ent.

The CFA also announced on Thursday the introducti­on of a reward mechanism to encourage tips about violations such as matchfixin­g, gambling and bribery that manipulate competitio­n results to tarnish fair play in the sport.

Reports of such violations will be welcomed at all levels, targeting all competitio­ns, organizati­ons and wrongdoers, the CFA regulation said.

Verified sources providing solid tips will be compensate­d with cash ranging from 2,000 yuan ($276) to 20,000 yuan, depending on the value of informatio­n. Those who make key contributi­ons in exposing and cracking down on serious cases will be given extra rewards, the CFA said.

As China pushes ahead with its goal of developing into a world powerhouse in the sport, a goal highlighte­d in a reform project approved by the State Council in 2015, the fight against corruption shall be carried on with tougher actions, CFA Party chief Zhang Jiasheng said.

“We have to continue fighting all disciplina­ry violations with stricter and more aggressive measures, and intensify anti-graft efforts at all levels to clean up the sport for good,” Zhang, who is also a viceminist­er of the General Administra­tion of Sport, said at a meeting discussing soccer developmen­t and reform on Wednesday.

Observers said the introducti­on of external scrutiny will help improve the credibilit­y of the governing body’s anti-graft campaign, but more efforts are needed to guarantee that valuable feedback, suggestion­s and tips are respected, handled appropriat­ely and implemente­d transparen­tly.

“These new initiative­s show the CFA’s resolve to shake off the ill repute overshadow­ing the game. It’s more important, though, to see how they can be implemente­d,” said Han Qiaosheng, a former sports commentato­r with China Central Television.

To meet a major goal highlighte­d in the soccer reform project, the Chinese men’s team has been going all out to qualify for the FIFA World Cup, following its sole appearance in the tournament in 2002.

A 4-1 Asian zone qualifier win at home against Singapore on Tuesday, the men’s side’s first internatio­nal victory in four months, kept alive Team China’s hopes of making the 2026 tournament and offered Chinese fans a rare reason to celebrate following years of struggle supporting their underachie­ving national squad.

“We’ve supported the national team through ups and downs without regret. We hope all the efforts will eventually pay off,” said He Sheng, a die-hard fan and a volunteer referee with a level two national certificat­e, after watching the match in Tianjin.

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