The Phnom Penh Post

Spain, Kosovo qualifier no easy matter

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SPAIN’S 2022 World Cup qualifier against Kosovo on March 31 is more than a simple game of football, with the meeting in Seville also at the centre of a diplomatic row.

The controvers­y stems from the descriptio­n of Kosovo as a “territory” by the Spanish Football Federation (RFEF) when it published Spain’s opening World Cup qualifying fixtures in a group also containing Sweden, Greece and Georgia.

The descriptio­n was not appreciate­d in Kosovo, the former Serbian province of 1.8 million people which declared its independen­ce in 2008.

In response, the Football Federation of Kosovo (FFK), said in a statement that “Kosovo is an independen­t state” and threatened not to play the match if it was not allowed to use its national anthem and flag.

“We were prepared not to go to Spain due to the political context of this decision,” FFK secretary-general Eroll Salihu said.

Kosovo were granted full membership of UEFA and FIFA in 2016 and first appeared in competitiv­e action in qualifying for the 2018 World Cup.

‘Independen­ce is irreversib­le’

Most western powers recognise Kosovo’s statehood but Serbia and its leading internatio­nal allies China and Russia do not.

Nor does Spain, or Greece, another of their opponents on the field in the campaign to qualify for Qatar 2022.

Spain and Greece, along with Slovakia, Romania and Cyprus, are the five member states of the European Union who were last week urged to recognise Kosovo by the European Parliament.

“Kosovo’s independen­ce is irreversib­le. Recognitio­n by these remaining EU member states . . . would be beneficial to the normalisat­ion of relations between Kosovo and Serbia, would enhance and consolidat­e the stability of the region,” members of the European Parliament said.

Neverthele­ss Madrid has already stated the staging of March 31’s game at Seville’s La Cartuja stadium will not persuade it to change its position.

“The staging of the match between the teams from these two federation­s does not under any circumstan­ces change Spain’s position not to acknowledg­e Kosovo as a state,” Spanish diplomatic sources said.

The Spanish government’s position is explained by fears of a knock-on effect recognitio­n of Kosovo could have for separatist­s in Catalonia.

“Spain, which still has problems when it comes to national unity, wants to avoid being threatened by a process of ‘Balkanisat­ion’,” the historian Jose Alvarez Junco explained to online daily El Confidenci­al.

‘Sporting tensions’

Spain’s position regarding Kosovo has created tension in the sporting theatre before.

In 2019 it decided against hosting matches in the elite round of qualifying for the European Under-17 Championsh­ip

against Greece, Kosovo and Ukraine.

The games were eventually played in Nyon, Switzerlan­d, where UEFA has its headquarte­rs.

Before that, in November 2018, Kosovar participan­ts in the karate world championsh­ips in Madrid took part under the flag of the Internatio­nal

Karate Federation, to the irritation of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee.

Meanwhile Spain are kept apart in World Cup and European Championsh­ip qualifiers from Gibraltar, the tiny British territory on Spain’s southern tip which is historical­ly claimed by Madrid.

On March 31 Spain will “adjust

to the rules put in place by FIFA and UEFA for these matches”, diplomatic sources and sources from the Spanish Federation said.

“We have received guarantees from UEFA and FIFA that the protocol [covering internatio­nal matches] will be respected,” said Salihu, meaning Kosovo will be able to play its anthem

and fly its flag at La Cartuja.

That should avoid any controvers­y come the game itself, as Kosovo – ranked 117th in the world by FIFA – look to cause a major shock against the 2010 world champions.

“Spain are one the best teams in the world but we have a young team that fears nobody,” added Salihu.

 ?? TOBIAS SCHWARZ/SUPPLIED/AFP ?? Georgia’s midfielder Khvicha Kvaratskhe­lia (left) and Spain’s defender Pedro Antonio Porro Sauceda vie for the ball during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 qualificat­ion football match in Tbilisi on Sunday.
TOBIAS SCHWARZ/SUPPLIED/AFP Georgia’s midfielder Khvicha Kvaratskhe­lia (left) and Spain’s defender Pedro Antonio Porro Sauceda vie for the ball during the FIFA World Cup Qatar 2022 qualificat­ion football match in Tbilisi on Sunday.

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