Edmonton Journal

FIFA reverting to its old bloated structure

- GRAHAM DUNBAR

GENEVA FIFA is set to create dozens of new committees and expert panels, reversing a governance reform passed in 2016 when the world soccer body was in turmoil during corruption scandals.

FIFA's plan to increase its number of standing committees from seven to 35 — with the option to let its president Gianni Infantino create and appoint extra panels of experts — was detailed in a draft update of its legal statutes released late Wednesday.

Creating the new bodies could let FIFA award hundreds of expenses-paid committee seats to soccer officials worldwide who will vote on the new rules at a May 17 meeting in Thailand. A similar system widely seen as patronage to encourage loyalty thrived in the presidency of Sepp Blatter, who was ousted from office in 2015.

The American and Swiss federal investigat­ions of internatio­nal soccer, revealed in May 2015 by hotel and office raids in Zurich, led to a wide-ranging review of FIFA's management structure and principles.

A 15-member review panel chaired by veteran Olympic lawyer Francois Carrard advised terminatin­g most of FIFA's 26 committees “to improve efficiency.” It also wanted to involve FIFA's 200-plus member federation­s “in a more meaningful gender-balanced and efficient way in the decision-making processes of FIFA.”

The panel included Infantino, then general secretary of European soccer body UEFA, and its slate of reforms was passed at a FIFA congress in February 2016. On the same day Infantino was elected to lead FIFA.

The new slate of committees under article 39 of FIFA's statutes being proposed to the next congress on May 17 in Bangkok, Thailand, includes a dedicated “Anti-Racism and Anti-Discrimina­tion Committee.”

FIFA had a racism task force under Blatter which was shut down within months of Infantino taking over, saying its work was complete. A new anti-racism body has been worked on with Real Madrid's Brazilian forward Vinicius Junior.

FIFA has just one committee overseeing organizati­on of its soccer tournament­s, and this would increase to nine. They would include separate bodies for each of the national team, club and youth competitio­ns for women.

There also would be separate men's and women's committees for issues involving players and coaches, plus a new fans committee, the FIFA draft statutes said.

The expansion is designed to “reflect the increasing breadth and depth of FIFA's activities in recent years, allowing for more member associatio­ns to be directly involved in the democratic decision-making processes,” FIFA said.

Decision-making under Infantino has often been delegated to a panel he chairs with just the presidents of the six continenta­l governing bodies, known as the FIFA bureau. Its decisions are rubber-stamped by the FIFA council, whose 37 members are each paid at least US$250,000 plus expenses annually.

PROMOTING WOMEN

Promoting women officials and tackling discrimina­tion in soccer should also be strengthen­ed by the latest FIFA statutes update. The draft proposal obliges the 211 national member federation­s to pursue those goals.

FIFA also advises members to include at least one woman in a delegation of three officials attending the annual congress.

DOUBLE WORLD CUP VOTE

FIFA is preparing to confirm the hosts of the 2030 and 2034 men's World Cups at the same meeting later this year. That needs a legal tweak because of a rule passed after the controvers­ial dual choice of 2018 host Russia and 2022 host Qatar on the same day in 2010.

The future hosts are effectivel­y decided with one preferred candidate for each: Saudi Arabia in 2034 and the six-nation, three-continent proposal for 2030 of Spain, Portugal and Morocco with a single game each for Argentina, Paraguay and the inaugural 1930 World Cup host Uruguay.

When FIFA announced those preference­s last October, it said final approval by members had to be made at separate meetings in late 2024. Now FIFA proposes letting the council decide to award “hosting rights to more than one FIFA World Cup at the same FIFA congress.”

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