The Star (Jamaica)

FIFA prepares to defend itself in T&T

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FIFA has signalled it will defend itself against a legal challenge filed by the former executive of the Trinidad and Tobago Football Associatio­n (TTFA), by filing an entry of appearance in the High Court on Tuesday.

Football’s world governing body has retained the Port of Spain law firm of Dr Claude Denbow SC. The entry of appearance was filed by instructin­g attorney Donna Denbow, with Jerome Rajcoomar listed as junior counsel.

Ousted TTFA president William Wallace and his team, represente­d by Dr Emir Crowne and Matthew Gayle, are challengin­g FIFA’s decision to remove them and appoint a normalisat­ion committee to run the associatio­n’s affairs.

The Wallace-led executive had initially taken their case to the Switzerlan­d-based Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) but withdrew the matter earlier this month saying they were not likely to be get a fair hearing, given some of the decisions CAS had taken in the early stages of the case.

With FIFA having filed an appearance to claim, it has 28 days from the May 19 date when it was served with notice of the TTFA’s claim to file a defence.

SEEKING THE COURT’S INTERVENTI­ON

The local football associatio­n is seeking the court’s interventi­on by way of a declaratio­n that FIFA’s removal of the TTFA executive, which was elected to office on November 24, 2019, is null, void and of no legal and/or binding effect; a permanent injunction preventing FIFA from interferin­g in, and/or seeking to override the fair and transparen­t democratic processes of the TTFA and/or from attempting removing the duly elected executive from office; and a permanent injunction preventing FIFA and/ or its agents and/or assigns and/or servants from interferin­g in the day-to-day management of the TTFA, including the associatio­n’s bank accounts and real property.

FIFA said it removed the executive because of mounting and potentiall­y crippling debt, insisting that the local body faced “a very real risk of insolvency and illiquidit­y” and urgent action was required.

The TTFA stands to be suspended as a result of taking FIFA to the local courts, as Article 64 of the FIFA statutes prohibits member associatio­ns from taking internal disputes, or disputes affecting Leagues, members of Leagues, clubs, members of clubs, players, officials and other Associatio­n Officials to ordinary courts of law.

It provides for disputes to be taken for arbitratio­n before CAS or to an independen­t and duly constitute­d arbitratio­n tribunal recognised under the rules of the Associatio­n or Confederat­ion.

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