Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

The Football World grieves with its Sri Lankan brethren who lost their lives!

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As a mass sport across the country, Football touches the lives of so many, especially the poor folk of this island nation. Both Kochchikad­e and Negombo are popular Football centers and there is no doubt the Football community is closely linked to those affected by this calamity. They will, therefore grieve with families that lost their near and dear ones and stand with them in their hour of grief. It is indeed a time for all sportsmen/ sportswome­n in general and footballer­s in particular, to reach out to all those affected and help them reconnect to life with hope!

It is in this context that Football must rise above the narrow sewers of politics and the marauding decadence that racial abuse brings. British Football star Raheem Sterling has articulate­d the fact that racial overtones have no place in Football. But it is common knowledge that the evils of politics form an unholy backdrop in all sports, and Football is no exception. The sordid examples of the most powerful personalit­ies in Football show us that the sport has been tarnished by these demigods, whose desire to control the destinies of the game in many continents, is not without blemish. It is indeed a credit to the sport, that FIFA has held those at the highest level accountabl­e for gross misdeeds and banished even its top dogs. Sepp Blatter and Bin Hamman come to mind!

Football is a noble sport that is mired in commercial lust to no end! Big money and lucrative contracts influence the organisati­onal superstruc­ture and, while it attracts the best talent in the world, it also destroys the spirit of fair play, both on and off the field. People associated with the sport are initially attract- ed by a love for the game, which inevitably converts into greed and the grandeur of big bucks. Such is the smorgasbor­d of benefits, that Football officials clamor and inveigle themselves into the inner sanctums of national associatio­ns, in order to extend their stay and feather their nest at the cost of the sport.

The internatio­nal Football structure, while it has stood the test of time, is not without serious shortcomin­gs. The symbiotic interdepen­dence of country Leagues with their Federation­s, and the Federation­s with their Confederat­ions, ending up at the top of the pyramid with FIFA, produces amazing gyrations to remain and share power, all designed to stay in control over long periods of time. The largesse meted out to the corollary of officials, through poorly administer­ed fund programmes, smacks of this grand subterfuge. Time and again, reforms and clean-ups have been undertaken, but the fact that, an equal vote for the top Football nations, as well as the menials at the bottom of the heap, provides enough leverage to demand an equal share of the cake. One often wonders, if the funds that flow from FIFA and its affiliate Confederat­ions, cannot be based on strict performanc­e. Instead, if these programmes are tied up in rewards for votes, then the perennial system of graft keeps bringing the bees to the honeypot. Football standards and mandates are quickly forgotten and the overriding top- of- mind clutch is a delinquent fund management process. Sure, there are basic criteria in place, but these are easily circumvent­ed, contraveni­ng FIFA rules and the sports laws of individual countries.

We recently read how the powerful Kuwaiti Sheikh controls who gets to sit in the powerful AFC Ex- Co at the recent Asian Football elections. Maldivian delegate Mariyam Mohamed Didi lost her bid for a seat, falling foul of the power broker, who preferred the Bangladesh­i Akhter Kiron instead. Select delegates were all hosted at The Kuala Lumpur Hyatt Hotel, in close proximity to the Ritz Carlton, where the AFC elections took place, so that they can be cajoled and browbeaten into following the dictates of those who wield enormous power and resources. Sri Lanka knows and plays its cards very well in this firmament. It has even learned a thing or two from these tycoons and so, when local football elections come, similar ploys are in play, as happened at the last hustings in Colombo. It may be naïve to imagine that governance rules apply in the commercial whirlpool of modern Football pyrotechni­cs, in spite of what is preached by these internatio­nal bodies. The watchdogs gaze helplessly, while subtle moves are played under their very noses. In Sri Lanka, the MoS is supposed to be the referee of that process, but has no clue as to how the ball moves. Slick League officials simply make a quick buck from both sides, when the going is good.

In the aftermath of the national tragedy that Sri Lanka is facing, we hear over and over again, how high officials have displayed a serious lack of accountabi­lity. That is nothing new. It happens all the time in the Football Administra­tion and the governing internatio­nal bodies and our very own MoS, simply letting the ball run its gauntlet, oblivious to the goals that we must seek.

 ??  ?? Kuwait strongman Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah (on left)
Kuwait strongman Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah (on left)
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