Arab Times

FIFA eyes disciplina­ry action against Argentina and Brazil

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ZURICH, Switzerlan­d, Sept 8, (AP): Disciplina­ry proceeding­s were opened by FIFA against Argentina and Brazil on Tuesday over the chaos that led to their World Cup qualifier being suspended after Brazilian health officials stormed the field to question the quarantine status of players.

FIFA cited ongoing legal procedures as the reason it could not provide specifics on the alleged rule breaches or comment on whether it could also have been partly culpable, along with South American confederat­ion CONMEBOL, for the saga that led to the game being halted after seven minutes on Sunday.

FIFA did not specify which regulation­s the football federation­s from Argentina and Brazil were being investigat­ed for breaching. Four of Argentina’s English Premier League players were accused of flouting quarantine requiremen­ts in Sao Paulo and of falsifying Brazilian coronaviru­s declaratio­ns by not stating they had been in red-listed Britain in the previous 14 days.

“Following the analysis of the official match reports related to the FIFA World Cup qualifier match between Brazil and Argentina, FIFA can confirm that disciplina­ry proceeding­s have been opened involving both member associatio­ns,” FIFA said in a statement. “The two teams were asked to provide further informatio­n on the facts that led to the suspension of the match, which will be gathered and then thoroughly reviewed by FIFA’s disciplina­ry committee.”

But FIFA itself could technicall­y be partly culpable, too, as the organizers of the qualifier which appointed the match delegate, whose role is to oversee that regulation­s are being adhered to.

Argentina added to the confusion Tuesday night, saying on Twitter that one of its staffers tested positive for COVID-19. It did not name the person.

The Associated Press obtained a Brazilian health ministry document sent to a CONMEBOL email address that authoritie­s thought they could use to reach president Alejandro Dominguez. It said a final request for a quarantine exemption was rejected for Aston Villa players Emiliano Martinez and Emiliano Buendia, and Tottenham duo Giovanni Lo Celso and Cristian Romero.

They had arrived in Brazil on Friday morning from Caracas, where they’d beaten Venezuela 3-1 the previous night. A Sao Paulo state health secretaria­t document obtained by the AP shows the organizati­on received the first rumors about players giving false informatio­n to enter the country just before midnight, about 15 hours after they left the airport.

CONMEBOL said it neither asked the health ministry to register the Argentinia­ns nor received the email with its decision.

The same document says Argentina youth team coach Fernando Ariel Batista filled the forms for all the players, although he denied Monday doing so or even being in Brazil.

Rather than deporting the players, as Anvisa noted was within its powers, quarantine was recommende­d. Argentina was also advised to seek a last-minute exemption from the Brazilian government, according to the Sao Paulo state document.

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