Kuwait Times

BBC abandons plans to hold FIFA presidenti­al debate

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ZURICH: Britain’s BBC has abandoned plans to stage a televised debate with the five candidates vyving for the presidency of soccer’s scandal-plagued governing body FIFA after one declined to take part and others imposed conditions.

The broadcaste­r had hoped to stage the debate in London in midFebruar­y, two weeks before election in Zurich on Feb. 26, but confirmed in a statement to Reuters that it would no longer go ahead.

It was the second time in three days that plans to bring the candidates together and publicly discuss their plans for the sport’s future had been scuppered. FIFA is in the throes of an unpreceden­ted crisis, with criminal investigat­ions into the sport under way in the United States and Switzerlan­d.

The world body’s president Sepp Blatter and European soccer boss Michel Platini, banned for eight years each, are among officials who have been sanctioned by its own ethics committee.

The BBC highlighte­d a comment on Twitter by presenter Victoria Derbyshire, who said the decision was made after one candidate had declined to take part. “We’ve pulled our live head-to-head TV debate w(ith) FIFA Presidenti­al hopefuls. After one declined, some others wanted to, um, move the goalposts,” she said.

Five candidates are bidding to replace Blatter: Prince Ali Bin Al-Hussein of Jordan, South African politician and businessma­n Tokyo Sexwale, UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino, Sheikh Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa of Bahrain and Frenchman Jerome Champagne.

They could not immediatel­y be reached for comment apart from Champagne, who said he had been told that the debate had been cancelled. Plans for another planned televised debate, due to be held at the European parliament in Brussels on Wednesday and broadcast by U.S. sports network ESPN, collapsed after Prince Ali and Sexwale withdrew at 48 hours’ notice.

That left Champagne as the only candidate present. No televised debate has ever been held in a FIFA presidenti­al election. British broadcaste­rs BBC and Sky made a similar proposal before the vote in May last year but Blatter, who won that election against Prince Ali, turned down the invitation.

The FIFA president is chosen by the 209 national football associatio­ns which are affiliated to it, each holding one vote.

Critics say the system leaves the other stakeholde­rs, including supporters, players, clubs and the media, effectivel­y sidelined from the election. — Reuters

 ??  ?? MONTPELLIE­RL: Montpellie­r’s new French coach Frederic Hantz (C) attends a training session at Grammont Stadium in the southern French city of Montpellie­r yesterday. — AFP
MONTPELLIE­RL: Montpellie­r’s new French coach Frederic Hantz (C) attends a training session at Grammont Stadium in the southern French city of Montpellie­r yesterday. — AFP

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