Tokyo, Prince Ali withdraw from Fifa debate

Tokyo Sexwale. File picture: Siphiwe Sibeko

Tokyo Sexwale. File picture: Siphiwe Sibeko

Published Jan 27, 2016

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Johannesburg – Prince Ali bin al-Hussein and Tokyo Sexwale have withdrawn from a scheduled televised debate for Fifa presidential candidates.

A planned televised debate between Fifa presidential candidates is in turmoil after two attendees pulled out.

The forum was scheduled to be held at the European Parliament on Wednesday, but a live television broadcast has been cancelled after Prince Ali bin al-Hussein and Tokyo Sexwale withdrew on Monday.

Sexwale, the former South African government minister turned diamond mining magnate, has offered few ideas to reform Fifa so far, and has failed to gain the support of the Confederation of African Football despite being the continent’s contender.

Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa had previously confirmed he would not attend, while Gianni Infantino only submitted a video presentation, leaving Jerome Champagne as the only candidate scheduled to take part.

Damian Collins, co-founder of NewFifaNow who helped organise the event, was annoyed by the late withdrawals and feels it is damaging to the governing body’s supposed desire for greater transparency amid ongoing corruption investigations.

“We are merely trying to put legitimate questions about the future of Fifa to Presidential candidates as members of various parliaments as well as on behalf of fans and other key stakeholders,” he said in a NewFifaNow statement.

“Any organisation interested in, or committed to, democracy, transparency and accountability would understand this, as should the people who want to be Fifa President. We are just seeing the same old Fifa at play and they have learned nothing about what they need to do to try to rebuild trust and credibility from the broader community.

“Rather than helping to rebuild Fifa’s credibility in the broader community, this outcome will just add to the impression that people at Fifa do not want open discussion about the future and reform of the organisation.

“Why don’t the Fifa Presidential candidates want to be subject to the same level of questioning and scrutiny that would be normal in any organisation run on democratic principles?”

The statement quoted a letter from Prince Ali to Collins in which he disclosed he had been advised the forum “may well constitute a breach of Fifa election rules,” adding his understanding that either Sheikh Salman or Infantino had “made a complaint to the Ad Hoc Electoral Committee” on the basis of political interference.

The debate is scheduled be streamed online, with Champagne acting as the keynote speaker.

Fifa’s presidential election is set to take place on February 26.

Meanwhile Infantino’s campaign for the Fifa presidency has been boosted by a declaration of support from the seven members of the Central American Football Union (UNCAF), while Sexwale has been criticised for the “low profile” nature of his campaign.

Uefa general secretary Infantino, meanwhile, published the letter of endorsement from the Central American federations on his Twitter page.

It was signed by Presidents of the Federations of Costa Rica, El Salvador, Honduras, Panama, Guatemala, Belize and Nicaragua as well as UNCAF chief Rafael Tinocco.

Various other countries, including Germany, Switzerland and Portugal, have also declared their support for the 45-year-old.

African News Agency

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