FIFA
under fire for disbanding anti-racism task force
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[September 27, 2016]
By Chris Bertram
MANCHESTER (Reuters) - World soccer's
governing body FIFA was under fire on Monday for winding up its
anti-racism task force with former presidential candidate Prince Ali
Bin Al Hussein of Jordan describing the move as worrying and
shameful.
FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura confirmed the decision when she
spoke to the Soccerex conference in Manchester, saying the task
force had a "very specific mandate".
"We will turn its work into a strong program of zero tolerance
policy toward discrimination of any kind, including violation of
human rights," she said. "We can live with perception (created by
disbanding the task force) but we are taking very firm action."
However, Prince Ali, a former FIFA executive committee member who
has twice run for the presidency, said that "the notion that the
current FIFA leadership believes that the task force’s
recommendations have been implemented is shameful."
He added that the announcement was "incredibly worrying".
"Never has the need to combat racism and racial discrimination been
more evident than it is in the world we live in today," Prince Ali
said in a statement.
"It is not something that any governing body with any semblance of
responsibility can down play or deny.
"The reality, as with many programs within FIFA, is that the task
force was never given real support since its conception and its role
was more about FIFA's image than actually tackling the issues."
The decision emerged on Friday when Osasu Obayiuwana, a Nigerian
broadcaster and lawyer who was a member of the panel, published on
Twitter a letter he received from FIFA announcing the end of the
task force.
It said the task force had achieved the goals which were set out for
it when it was created under the leadership of disgraced former FIFA
president Sepp Blatter in 2013.
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Cars drive past a logo in front of FIFA's headquarters in Zurich,
Switzerland June 8, 2016. REUTERS/Arnd Wiegmann
The task force's original chairman, Jeffrey Webb, was among
high-ranking soccer officials arrested in Zurich in May last year.
Webb has since pleaded guilty in the United States to offences
linked to racketeering, fraud and money-laundering.
He was one of 42 soccer officials and entities indicted last year,
plunging FIFA into its worst ever crisis.
Webb was replaced as head of the task force by Constant Omary, a
FIFA Council member from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Britain's Kick It Out anti-racism group said it was perplexed by
FIFA's decision, especially as the move came less than two years
before the World Cup in Russia, a country it said was "notorious for
racism and abusive activities toward minorities".
It said football should seek to lead the way in combating violence,
prejudice and hate and that organizations fighting racism would be
"deeply disheartened to hear news of the disbandment, as they look
to FIFA for leadership."
(Writing by Brian Homewood in Zurich, editing by Pritha Sarkar and
Ed Osmond)
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