Arab Times

Prince Ali vows end to Sepp FIFA fiefdom

Jordanian expects sponsors to snub FIFA if Blatter stays

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LONDON, April 6, (AFP): FIFA presidenti­al candidate Prince Ali bin Al Hussein accused Sepp Blatter of turning the presidency into a personal fiefdom as he unveiled his manifesto for the role on Monday.

Ali, FIFA vice-president for Asia, told AFP in a phone call from Cairo, where he is attending the Confederat­ion of African Football congress, that an unfair system of patronage had taken root under Blatter.

“National associatio­ns have to feel that it’s not a matter of an executive president going and supporting national associatio­ns on an ad hoc basis, but that they have their rights, they own this associatio­n and that they should get the support they need across the board in a case-by-case fashion,” said the Jordanian royal. Ali, Dutch football federation chief Michel van Praag and former Portugal winger Luis Figo are all vying to unseat 79-year-old Blatter, who will seek a fifth term in office in the May 29 election in Zurich.

Ali’s manifesto contains several thinly veiled swipes at Blatter, including claims national associatio­ns have become dependent on his “personal approval” and a charge that World Cup revenues have been distribute­d “at the whim of the FIFA president”.

He also warns that “drastic action” is required to restore the world governing body’s credibilit­y following corruption allegation­s over the decision to award the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar respective­ly.

When he launched his campaign in February, Ali spoke of a “culture of intimidati­on” within FIFA and he believes the fear of losing favour may yet influence national associatio­n representa­tives when they vote in the election.

“Obviously there is that fear. I have to be honest about that,” he said. “The reason being is that many national associatio­ns around the world really depend specifical­ly on FIFA funding, even though I don’t believe it’s where it should be in any case.

“Their fear is that there may be punishment­s in that respect even down to confed- erations levels, where all of a sudden things are not going very well for them.”

Ali, president of the Jordanian Football Associatio­n, added: “When it comes down to the election, we also need to discuss with the electoral committee how things are conducted, that it’s a proper, secret ballot.

“I do have my concerns about the system that’s in place right now, where possibly people could know who the voter is at the end of the day.”

Figo’s manifesto included proposals to increase the size of the World Cup to up to 48 teams, but Ali, 39, believes that all stakeholde­rs should be consulted before any changes are brought in.

“I’m a bit surprised because promises are being made to increase the number of participat­ing countries in the World Cup and at the same time, in 2022, to shorten the actual time of the World Cup,” he said.

“To me it doesn’t seem like there’s a practical study of how things should be done and we owe it to the whole footballin­g world to do things in a responsibl­e manner.”

The 14-page manifesto outlines Ali’s vision for a “virtuous circle of developmen­t, football and commercial success supported by a FIFAthat is a service organisati­on and a model of good governance”.

His proposals include increased investment in women’s and youth football, as well as a pledge that every member associatio­n will have “a national stadium worthy of that title”.

He also wants to overhaul FIFA’s internatio­nal ranking system, describing it as “flawed”, and calls for “a full and open debate” on the introducti­on of video technology.

FIFA presidenti­al candidate Prince Ali bin al-Hussein believes the scandal-hit organizati­on will struggle to replace sponsors and be damaged financiall­y if Sepp Blatter remains in charge.

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