FIFA president Gianni Infantino was to preside over world soccer’s annual congress in Mexico City yesterday to push through reforms aimed at rehabilitating the scandal-tarred organization.
Infantino — who was elected in February after former FIFA president Sepp Blatter was brought down by the corruption crisis — wants to turn the page and put the focus back on the sport.
“We will show to the world we are serious with the reforms, with our democratic process and football development,” Infantino said on Thursday at an opening ceremony for the congress.
Photo: Reuters
In another attempt at restoring trust, the North and Central American and Caribbean Football Confederation (CONCACAF), which has been in the eye of the corruption storm, elected a new president on Thursday.
Canadian head of soccer Victor Montagliani became CONCACAF’s fourth president in five years after his three predecessors were ensnared in corruption allegations, with the last one arrested in December last year.
FIFA’s new council on Tuesday decided to resume the process to select the host of the 2026 World Cup, which had been frozen since last year over claims of misdeeds in awarding the tournaments to Russia for 2018 and Qatar for 2022.
However, the scandals keep haunting world soccer.
On Monday, Infantino’s former boss, Michel Platini, said he would step down as head of European body UEFA after failing to overturn his ban from all soccer-related activity over allegations that he received a dubious US$2 million payment from FIFA. Infantino was Platini’s No. 2.
Earlier this month, FIFA banned for life top executive members Sergio Jadue of Chile and Luis Bedoya of Colombia over bribes they accepted for football television and marketing contracts.
World soccer’s governing body must now ratify reforms that were approved by a special congress in February, which renamed the disgraced executive committee as the FIFA Council and pruned its powers.
The reforms came into force on April 27, 60 days after the vote, but Infantino must now make sure that the regional confederations and national associations at the heart of the corruption follow through.
“Things are getting calmer at FIFA,” Brazilian member of the council Fernando Sarney said.
The governance reforms include term limits, transparency in salaries and more balanced executive powers.
However, Infantino’s promises of a new era at FIFA are not happening as fast as some want.
The reforms give bigger powers to the secretary general, who would become a true counterweight to the president.
Infantino has yet to name a deputy. He has vowed to pick someone this summer, but a decision could come later, as council member Wolfgang Niersbach of Germany said no extraordinary meetings were planned before the fall.
Former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke of France was sacked in January and banned from soccer for 12 years over misconduct in television deals and World Cup ticket sales.
Acting secretary general Markus Kattner of Germany, yesterday was to present the state of the organization’s finances, which posted a US$122 million loss last year.
In other decisions, the congress faces prickly votes over the admission of Gibraltar and Kosovo that would take the world body to 211 members.
The council on Tuesday recommended that both be admitted, which would entitle them to participate in the 2018 World Cup qualifiers.
The former Serbian province of Kosovo narrowly won a vote at the UEFA congress this month to get membership to the European body.
FIFA’s executive originally rejected Gibraltar’s bid, but the Court of Arbitration for Sport ordered that the congress take a vote on the British territory, which is also claimed by Spain.
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