Arab Times

FIFA approves 5 candidates

Bility and Platini sidelined

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ZURICH, Nov 12, (RTRS): FIFA has approved five candidates for its February presidenti­al election amid the worst crisis in its history, after barring Liberia’s Musa Bility on integrity grounds and leaving out UEFA chief Michel Platini while he remains under suspension.

Platini, the original favourite to succeed Sepp Blatter as head of global soccer’s governing body, was not admitted because he has been suspended for 90 days pending a full Ethics Committee investigat­ion.

FIFA had already announced that it would not process former French internatio­nal football star while he was suspended, but could review its position if he wins an appeal against the ban.

Buffeted by a series of scandals over the last few years, FIFA was thrown into turmoil in May by the US indictment­s of 14 football officials, including two FIFA vice-presidents, and sports marketing executives for alleged corruption.

Blatter, also suspended for 90 days, is facing criminal investigat­ion in Switzerlan­d over a 2 million Swiss franc ($2.1 million) payment from FIFA to Platini. Both men have denied wrongdoing.

FIFA’s electoral committee said on Thursday the five approved presidenti­al candidates were Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan, Asian Football Confederat­ion President Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa of Bahrain, former FIFA official Jerome Champagne of France, UEFA General Secretary Gianni Infantino of Switzerlan­d and South Africa businessma­n Tokyo Sexwale.

“The integrity check included a review of corporate records, litigation cases, bankruptcy proceeding­s, potential regulatory actions taken “assessed any allegation­s against the candidates carefully, including those against Sheikh Salman concerning his alleged involvemen­t into the events in Bahrain in 2011”.

It said no evidence of “any personal and direct involvemen­t” by Salman in rights abuses had been found, so the committee had upheld his candidacy.

There are no clear favourites to win the election, in which each of the 209 national associatio­ns (FAs) who are affiliated with FIFA hold one vote.

Critics say they are heavily influenced by the continenta­l confederat­ions, such as Europe’s UEFA or Africa’s CAF, which sometimes ask their members to vote as a bloc for one candidate. But as voting is secret, FAs can easily disobey their confederat­ions without being detected, which makes voting unpredicta­ble.

Infantino announced his intention to stand only one day before the registrati­on deadline in October, and is expected to withdraw if Platini is allowed back into the race.

Last month, Sheikh Ahmad AlFahad Al-Sabah, one of the top powerbroke­rs in global sport and a member of FIFA’s executive committee, said he hoped there would be “coordinati­on” between Infantino and Sheikh Salman if Platini was unable to run.

Champagne has alleged that already in this election “there is a pre-campaign of arrangemen­ts in five-star hotels behind closed doors”. He was alluding to alleged back-room deals in which certain candidates do not run against each other and one then drops out to clear the way for the other to win.

Infantino

Sheikh Salman

Sexwale

Prince Ali

Champagne

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