The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Bribery cases cloud Fifa council elections

- By Rob Harris

The specter of fresh corruption scandals hangs over the annual gathering of world soccer leaders, two years after the FIFA Congress was shaken by the exposure of far-reaching fraud.

MANAMA, BAHRAIN >> The specter of fresh corruption scandals hangs over the annual gathering of world soccer leaders, two years after the FIFA Congress was shaken by the exposure of far-reaching fraud.

The election of Asian members to FIFA’s ruling council on Monday kickstarts a week of meetings in Bahrain, with powerbroke­r Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah off the ballot after his alleged bribery was disclosed by American authoritie­s.

The Kuwaiti sheikh’s resignatio­n from all soccer roles — while remaining in his Olympic posts — leaves three men competing for three spots from the Asian Football Confederat­ion on the FIFA Council, known as the executive committee until it was rebranded last year.

The only contested AFC election is for the one protected FIFA seat for Asian women. Of the four contenders, one has previous FIFA experience: Moya Dodd, who was on the executive committee at the time colleagues were arrested in the May 2015 raids in Zurich. The Sheikh Ahmad allegation­s demonstrat­ed that the U.S. Department of Justice investigat­ions into soccer corruption are ongoing even as FIFA officials swept up in 2015 prepare for sentencing hearings or trial in New York. “No one takes any pleasure in seeing either individual­s or the game suffer,” Dodd told The Associated Press on Sunday in the Bahraini capital Manama. “But I think that we have to accept that it’s a work in progress to bring football to the level of integrity that we want it to be, and while we continue to have these controvers­ies, our reputation will suffer. The view of football from the fans, the stakeholde­rs, the sponsors etc. will also suffer.”

Sheikh Ahmad was identifiab­le in a transcript of a court hearing last month when 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.

“I think those of us who are in football have a responsibi­lity to steer the game to take the next best step that we can for the game to move it in the right direction,” Dodd said. “So that’s what I’m focused on and the message I will give to the voting delegates this congress is that this is AFC’s opportunit­y to demonstrat­e its values to the world.”

Challengin­g Dodd in the election are Mafuza Akhter of Bangladesh, Han Un Gyong of North Korea, who both declined to be interviewe­d, and Susan Shalabi of Palestine. The quartet is chasing one of six spots on the FIFA Council reserved for women, covering the six confederat­ions.

“I think we’ve seen how important it is for there to be a diversity of voices at the top table of FIFA,” Dodd said. “When I joined, there had only been one (woman on the executive committee), there were then three and two of us couldn’t vote and I’d think when you look back you’d have to say that we did make a difference

“Our voices were heard, it was part of a change in culture in FIFA and you saw in the reforms (that) women in football was a key tenet of the reforms and it’s a key priority of FIFA going forward.”

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