The Star Early Edition

Prince Ali unhappy about ‘deal’

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FIFA presidenti­al candidate Prince Ali of Jordan has written to Fifa’s Ad Hoc Electoral Committee asking them to examine a deal between the Asian Football Confederat­ion (AFC) and the Confederat­ion of African Football (CAF).

Prince Ali is concerned that a newly announced four-year “memorandum of understand­ing” (MOU) between the two, which the parties have said is to improve the “developmen­t of football in the two confederat­ions”, is a way of engineerin­g a “bloc vote” in the forthcomin­g Fifa election.

AFC president Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa is one of those standing against Prince Ali when Sepp Blatter’s replacemen­t is chosen on February 26 and is heavily involved in the agreement, citing a “memorable day” in a statement on CAF’s official website.

But citing a possible breach of rules, Prince Ali said in a statement of his own: “I am concerned that there has been an attempt to breach electoral rules in the Fifa Presidenti­al election. I have written to the Fifa Ad Hoc Electoral Committee informing them of my concerns and asking them to examine the matter.

“I have always promoted cross-regional understand­ing, however, the timing of this MOU between the AFC and the CAF looks like a blatant attempt to engineer a bloc vote.

“Africa’s proud football associatio­ns are not for sale and developmen­t resources belonging to national football associatio­ns should not be used by presidenti­al candidates and confederat­ion presidents for political expediency.

“Questions must be asked: was this deal approved by the members of the executive committees of both the AFC and CAF and is the timing of the announceme­nt, prior to a presidenti­al election, acceptable?

“Now more than ever, this apparent exploitati­on of confederat­ion resources shows the world that the actions of individual­s must stop bringing Fifa into disrepute.”

Prince Ali launched his new manifesto in London last week, announcing that he wants to bring in tougher new rules on World Cup bidding, similar to that used by the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee. – African News Agency (ANA)

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