FIFA
candidate Champagne protests over election observers
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[February 23, 2016]
By Brian Homewood
ZURICH (Reuters) - FIFA presidential
candidate Jerome Champagne has protested to soccer's world governing
body about the number of observers allowed into the hall for Friday's
election, saying he believed they were working for his rivals.
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Champagne said 20 observers' credentials had been given to European
ruling body UEFA, whose general secretary Gianni Infantino is
running for the FIFA job, and seven to the Asian Football
Confederation (AFC), whose chief Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al
Khalifa is also a FIFA presidential candidate.
In a letter to FIFA’s electoral commission, seen by Reuters,
Champagne said the presence of observers from the confederations
could unfairly influence Friday's poll because they would have
access to the voting delegates.
He told Reuters by telephone that the accreditations he was
complaining about were in addition to the eight granted to each
candidate and their teams.
A spokesman for the electoral committee said accreditation was in
the hands of FIFA, who could not immediately be reached for comment.
GRAFT SCANDAL
Each of FIFA's 209-member national soccer associations (FAs) hold
one vote at the poll in which five candidates are vying to be
elected to lead the global soccer body out of the worst graft
scandal in its history.
Several dozen leading soccer officials have been indicted in the
United States and a criminal investigation is also underway in
Switzerland, while FIFA president Sepp Blatter has been banned for
eight years for ethics violations.
The Frenchman said there was a clear intention "to swamp the
Congress hall with confederation employees able to access the voting
FAs and their delegates.
"The list of names of the persons benefitting from these
accreditations reveals the presence of most of the members of these
two candidates’ (Infantino and Sheikh Salman) campaign teams,"
Champagne said in his letter.
"Considering the gravity of the facts, I hereby lodge an official
complaint to the FIFA Electoral Committee and request the
cancellation of these unfair and undue privileges given to two of
the five candidates."
The other candidates for the FIFA post are Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein
of Jordan and South African politician Tokyo Sexwale.
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UNDUE INFLUENCE
Champagne has long complained that the six continental
confederations, who do not vote, hold undue influence over the
national FAs.
As long as voting is secret, however, member FAs can ignore their
continental body's recommendations without being found out.
Champagne and Prince Ali have expressed concern that voters could
photograph their ballot papers to prove who they voted for but
FIFA's electoral committee has said voters will be banned from
taking mobile phones and cameras into voting booths.
Acting FIFA president Issa Hayatou said in a letter to the member
associations on Monday that he was confident this week's
Extraordinary FIFA Congress in Zurich would start the process of
restoring the global soccer body's credibility.
"Our responsibility to FIFA and the game is to demonstrate that we -
individually and collectively - are committed to: embracing reform,
restoring trust, strengthening governance and fostering greater
diversity," Hayatou wrote.
"We must ensure that this Extraordinary Congress signals a new dawn
for FIFA. This Congress will mark the beginning of the difficult
work ahead as we begin implementing reform - bringing the changes to
life. I look forward to... seizing the opportunity that has been
placed before us."
(Editing by Ken Ferris)
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