FIFA Vice-President Prince Ali bin Al Hussein said Tuesday he would
stand against Sepp Blatter for presidency of football’s world governing
body, declaring that years of controversy surrounding “the beautiful
sport” must end.
“I am seeking the presidency of FIFA because I
believe it is time to shift the focus away from administrative
controversy and back to sport,” Prince Ali said on his official Twitter
feed.
“The headlines should be about football, the beautiful sport, not about FIFA.”
Prince
Ali, a Jordanian who was elected FIFA vice-president for Asia in 2011,
said he had been encouraged to stand in the May 29 election after
discussing the forthcoming election with senior figures in the sport.
“This
was not an easy decision. It came after careful consideration and many
discussions with respected FIFA colleagues over the last few months,” he
said.
“The message I heard, over and over, was that it is time
for a change. The world game deserves a world-class governing body — an
International Federation that is a service organisation and a model of
ethics, transparency and good governance.”
FIFA has been steeped
in controversy and allegations of corruption since Russia and Qatar’s
successful bids to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
Prince Ali,
the 39-year-old son of the late King Hussein of Jordan, had been one of
the most senior FIFA officials to call for the publication in full of a
report last year into the winning bids.
But FIFA’s executive voted
to release only an “appropriate”, edited version of top US lawyer
Michael Garcia’s report into the alleged corruption and Blatter last
month ruled out any suggestion that Qatar could lose the tournament.
“It would really need an earthquake, extremely important new elements to go back on this World Cup in Qatar,” Blatter said.
FIFA
and Blatter have sought, without success, to silence critics of the
Qatari and Russian bids, and it will now looks as if they will become
the election battleground.
Prince Ali is the FIFA vice-president
for Asia and founder of the Jordanian and West Asian Football
Federations and is standing to prevent Blatter win a fifth term in
office since the Swiss was first elected in 1998.
Frenchman Jerome Champagne had been the only other candidate to declare so far that he would stand against Blatter.
Prince
Ali will need five of FIFA’s 209 member countries to nominate him as a
candidate before a January 29 deadline and is believed to have plenty of
support, including that of European football governing body UEFA
president Michel Platini.
The Jordanian is likely to gain much of
his backing from FIFA’s European federation, many of whose members have
been vociferous in their objections to the victorious Qatar 2022 bid.
He
will also lobby support from the Asian confederation, whose head is
Bahrain’s Sheik Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa, and will get further
backing from the United States and Caribbean nations.
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