Saturday Star

Africa, Asia bury the hatchet ahead of Fifa elections

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relations between the continents soured by acrimony over the hosting of the 2006 World Cup.

It could lead to African and Asian voters supporting each other’s candidates in the Fifa presidenti­al election in Zurich on February 26.

Sheikh Salman, South African politician and busi- nessman Tokyo Sexwale and Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan are among five candidates standing in the election.

The others are former Fifa official Jerome Champagne from France and Uefa general secretary Gianni Infantino, a Swiss.

Each of Fifa’s 209-member associatio­ns hold one vote at the presidenti­al election, with 54 of those in Africa and 46 in Asia.

Voting is secret and there is no obligation for FAs from the same continent to vote as a block.

CAF has not formally endorsed any candidates even though Sexwale is only the second African to stand for the post, following Hayatou in 2002.

The election will go ahead with Fifa mired in the worst corruption scandal in its history, with criminal investigat­ions into the sport under way in the US and Switzerlan­d.

Fifa’s own ethics committee has sanctioned a number of officials, the most notable being Fifa president Sepp Blatter and European soccer boss Michel Platini who were both banned for eight years.

“Today we are here to relaunch a co-operation that will be beneficial to the two Confederat­ions after several months of work,” Hayatou, who is also acting Fifa presi- dent, said in a statement.

Sheikh Salman, from Bahrain, said Africa and Asia were two great continents who have made a dramatic impact on the global football stage in this century.

“Both of us have aspiration­s and expectatio­ns of staging future tournament­s not only the World Cup but also in women and age group competitio­ns,” he said.

Africa and Asia used to play an annual match between their respective club champions and a game between the winners of their continenta­l championsh­ips.

These were discontinu­ed, however, after CAF ended formal relations in 2000 to protest against Asian electors voting for eventual winners Germany rather than South Africa in the 2006 World Cup bidding process. – Reuters

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