Khaleej Times

FRIDAY IS D-DAY FOR FIFA

Blatter era set to end as Sheikh Salman, Infantino emerge front runners in Presidenti­al election

- AP

geneva — The Sepp Blatter era at Fifa is set to finally end on Friday when soccer’s scandal-scarred world body picks a new president after nine months of crisis.

An election meeting designed to give Fifa a fresh start with a new leader could yet be overshadow­ed by its criminally corrupt past.

Voters return to Zurich this week unsure who is the next target of federal law enforcemen­t agencies in the US and Switzerlan­d, who have sent Fifa into meltdown with waves of arrests, extraditio­ns and guilty pleas.

Swiss prosecutor­s could decide this week is best to meet key witnesses in their widening case. Many soccer officials are making possibly their last working trip to Switzerlan­d until May 2019, when the next scheduled Fifa election should be held in Zurich.

At the last election in May, Blatter won a fifth presidenti­al term two days after Fifa’s favoured fivestar hotel in Zurich and its own headquarte­rs were raided. The pressure of criminal investigat­ions soon forced out Blatter from his beloved Fifa in his 41st year on the payroll.

Now, leaders of Fifa’s 209 member federation­s visit the tiny Swiss city again to elect a successor for the now-banned 79-year-old who has been president since 1998. The winner will be just the fourth elected Fifa chief in more than 50 years. Two front-runners have emerged in a five-candidate contest: Asia’s soccer leader, Shaikh Salman of Bahrain, and Gianni Infantino, the Swiss general secretary of European governing body Uefa.

The other candidates are: Former Fifa vice president Prince Ali of Jordan, who lost to Blatter in May; former Fifa official Jerome Champagne of France; and South African businessma­n Tokyo Sexwale, once an inmate of Robben Island prison with Nelson Mandela.

Infantino acknowledg­ed that police could hit Fifa for the fourth time in nine months.

“They know what is best for their work to be done in the most efficient way,” Infantino said in a recent interview. “If I’m elected president of Fifa, what they can count on (is) not 100 but 200 percent with me to clean and to put anyone in jail who has done anything bad for football.”

The three previous strikes — arresting seven men, including two Fifa vice presidents, on May 27; interrogat­ing Blatter and former protege Michel Platini on Sept. 25; arresting two more Fifa vice presidents on Dec. 3 — were on days that Fifa’s discredite­d executive committee met. It meets again on Wednesday.

Shaikh Salman suggests government agencies have tried to influence Fifa politics. That view is shared by Blatter and Russian President Vladimir Putin, who claimed the US wants the 2018 World Cup taken from his country.

“Choosing the time and place during an election or an (executive committee) meeting,” Shaikh Salman told the AP this month of previous police raids, “I think this raises a lot of doubts on why, and leave people a bit suspicious on the intentions.”

The Bahraini royal was “absolutely” sure Fifa did enough since May to deserve being left in peace this week. Fifa also hopes so, and aims to persuade the US Department of Justice that it is a victim of systemic corrup- tion and should not be indicted.

So, on Friday, the 209 members can also vote through wide-ranging reforms to restructur­e Fifa. These would dilute the president’s authority, empower Fifa’s staff and increase oversight by independen­t experts. If Fifa was indicted, it would join 41 soccer and marketing officials, plus marketing agencies, who have been charged or pleaded guilty so far in the sprawling US case. Blatter, who cannot be extradited from Switzerlan­d, is a confirmed target.

American investigat­ors have focused on bribery in North and South America valued at $200 million for awarding commercial rights for continenta­l competitio­ns. They also alleged cash-for-votes paid through a Fifa account linked to 2010 World Cup host South Africa.

Swiss prosecutor­s began by searching for money laundering in the 2018-2022 World Cup bid contests won by Russia and Qatar. Liaising with American counterpar­ts, they went far beyond that brief to target all Fifa business.

Last September, a Swiss criminal case was opened against Blatter for mismanagem­ent of Fifa money. It led Fifa’s ethics committee to ban both Blatter and Platini for eight years. Verdicts in their appeals are expected on Monday.

Even if barred from the election hall, Blatter has been an election factor taking calls from voters seeking advice, he told a French radio station this week.

“Vote with your conscience. Vote for who you find good,” said Blatter, who has criticised Infantino in interviews. They were born in neighborin­g villages in the Valais region. Infantino’s campaign has tempted voters with more: Expanding the World Cup from 32 to 40 teams to increase Fifa’s $5 billion tournament income; bigger annual grants to national and continenta­l bodies; new money for small regional groups.

Salman’s manifesto is closer to Blatter’s thinking though he promises a hands-off leadership style.

Still, there is genuine warmth between the favourites. “I get along very well with him,” Shaikh Salman said of Infantino. “He’s a great guy.”

Infantino has not directly criticised the Shaikh, who led Bahrain’s soccer federation during Arab Spring protests in 2011.

In a potentiall­y tight race, one theory has Prince Ali’s voters holding the balance of power.

A plausible scenario sees Shaikh Salman and Infantino with significan­t support in the first-round ballot, yet short of up to 140 votes needed for outright victory, and maybe fewer than the 105-plus tally which could persuade rivals to concede ahead of a second vote.

A late campaignin­g opportunit­y was in Manhattan on Sunday, at the draw for Copa America Centenario. That 16-nation tournament is central to bribery allegation­s in the DoJ indictment. —

 ?? AP file ?? Italy’s Gianni Infantino is a front runner for the post of Fifa president. —
AP file Italy’s Gianni Infantino is a front runner for the post of Fifa president. —

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