European MPs chide absent FIFA candidates
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[January 28, 2016]
By Mike Collett
BRUSSELS, Jan 27 (Reuters) - European
parliamentarians reacted angrily on Wednesday after a debate between
candidates for the FIFA presidency was cancelled because four of the
five contenders declined to show up.
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The candidates had sent a bad signal to soccer fans around the world
at a time when FIFA is mired in scandal, the parliamentarians said.
A total of five men are standing to replace the disgraced Sepp
Blatter as head of soccer's world governing body. But only Frenchman
Jerome Champagne turned up in Brussels for the planned debate.
The other four contenders are Prince Ali Bin al-Hussein of Jordan,
South African politician and businessman Tokyo Sexwale, UEFA general
secretary Gianni Infantino, and Sheikh Salman Bin Ibrahim al-Khalifa
of Bahrain.
"Where did the candidates go? What spooked them? Who or what stood
to gain by making sure the event we had planned today did not
happen?," said Bonita Mersiades, co-founder of the New FIFA Now
pressure group and chair of the meeting.
"I do know who stands to lose -- its football. You would hope after
the events of the last eight months the five men vying to be
president of FIFA...might actually get this."
FIFA is in the throes of an unprecedented crisis, with criminal
investigations into the sport underway in the United States and
Switzerland. Blatter and European soccer boss Michel Platini have
been banned for eight years each.
A total of 41 individuals and entities, including many former FIFA
officials, have been charged with corruption-related offences in the
United States. Swiss authorities are also investigating whether
corruption played a role in FIFA's awarding of World Cup hosting
rights to Russia and Qatar.
The debate, due to be held at the European parliament in Brussels on
Wednesday and broadcast by U.S. sports network ESPN, collapsed after
Prince Ali and Sexwale withdrew at 48 hours' notice. Ali claimed
"political interference" -- a reason MEP Marc Tarabvella described
as "utterly ridiculous".
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Infantino originally said he would send a video link, while Salman
said he would not come because of Asian confederation commitments.
"It is a terrible signal to football fans worldwide because if
proves these candidates are not suited to guarantee the integrity
FIFA so badly needs," European MEP Ivo Belet of Belgium said.
British MEP Emma McClarkin said: "It's the fans I feel sorry for
thinking that after Sepp Blatter stepped down there was light at the
end of the tunnel. Instead these candidates have scored a massive
own goal for FIFA today."
The FIFA president is chosen by the 209 national football
associations which are affiliated to it, each holding one vote.
Infantino's bid for the presidency was boosted last Friday when he
won overwhelming backing from Europe's football associations.
(Reporting by Mike Collett; Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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