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Asian leaders rebel, FIFA Council poll off
ASIAN soccer leaders rebelled against FIFA yesterday, calling off their extraordinary congress and postponing the election of three representatives to the new FIFA Council.
The Asian Football Confederation said the congress lasted only 27 minutes after member countries voted 42-1 against the agenda. The decision comes two days after FIFA barred a Qatari candidate from running for a spot on the council.
The congress in Goa, western India, had been called to elect three officials to join existing AFC members from Japan, Kuwait and Malaysia, as well as President Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa of Bahrain, on the 37-member FIFA Council.
“The congress has spoken with one voice and that has been clear for us all to see,” Sheikh Salman said. “FIFA President Gianni Infantino, I am not sure if you have been at a shorter congress but I think you can see the strength of opinion in the room.”
Only Singapore voted in favor of the agenda. The country’s candidate, Zainudin Nordin, was set to benefit from his Qatari opponent being excluded.
The increase of the FIFA Council to 37 members, chaired by Infantino, was a key part of reforms at the scandal-hit world body and was approved on the same day in February that the former UEFA secretary general beat Sheikh Salman for the presidency.
“Today the AFC and Asian football has shown solidarity,” Sheikh Salman said.
The AFC later held an emergency executive committee meeting, where Chinese candidate Zhang Jian was added to the committee until the next extraordinary congress. Dates and a venue for the rescheduled election will have to be ratified by FIFA.
FIFA ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckert earlier this month opened a case against Qatar Football Association vice president Saoud al-Mohannadi, who was one of four men seeking one of the new seats from Asia on world soccer’s ruling council.
FIFA prosecutors asked Eckert to ban al-Mohannadi for “no less than two years and six months” for not telling the truth and not cooperating properly with an ethics investigation. But al-Mohannadi said at the time he was confident of a fair review. The case does not involve Qatar’s 2022 World Cup bid.
FIFA announced on Sunday it had barred al-Mohannadi from running in the election based on an ethics committee report, leaving Zhang, the Chinese soccer association secretary general, running against Ali Kafashian of Iran and Nordin of Singapore for two of the three FIFA Council seats from Asia.
The third seat from Asia is reserved for female candidates, with Moya Dodd of Australia running against Han Un Gyong of North Korea and Mafuza Akhter of Bangladesh.
It is unclear what the effect of yesterday’s turmoil will have on an October 13-14 meeting of the FIFA Council in Zurich with Asia now below its quota of delegates.
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