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    FIFA Corruption Continuing

    So FIFA and AFC continue to be a joke.

    Basically AFC is being run by the PGCC and their paid off shameless puppets from South and Southeast Asia.
    Khak bar sareeshoon.

    They just elected a woman from the AFC to FIFA that didn't even know who won the Women's World Cup!

    MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Even after a year under new leadership, FIFA is still pleading with the world: Trust us.

    The message is proving as hard to sell as sponsorship of the World Cup.

    It’s no wonder. Gianni Infantino arrives at his second congress as FIFA president with his “crisis is over” declaration at last year’s gathering of soccer’s 211 nations looking remarkably outlandish.

    Criminal investigations are still exposing shady transactions.

    The suitability of members of the ruling council remains in doubt.

    Reforms intended to curb the powers of the president and restore FIFA’s credibility are being eroded.

    Against this backdrop, FIFA has been trying to persuade commercial backers to sign up after so many were scared off by the corruption that plagued the Sepp Blatter era.

    FIFA’s leadership was able to start its congress week in Bahrain by trumpeting the arrival of Qatar Airways to fill the airline sponsorship category that has been vacant for more than two years. But the deal was anticipated given it is the state-owned carrier of the 2022 World Cup hosts.

    A true test of the confidence of FIFA’s new hierarchy will come when major international corporations sign up that are not from China, Russia or Qatar — the source of all of FIFA’s new World Cup deals in recent years.

    New sponsors in traditional strongholds like Japan and the United States have yet to convince shareholders they should partner with a scandal-tainted organization. Many were scared off in 2015 when FIFA’s reputation was shredded by widespread bribery being exposed after high-ranking executives were arrested in Zurich hotel raids.

    “We hope that more (sponsors) will come before the end of the year,” FIFA secretary general Fatma Samoura told The Associated Press. “That was a strong signal from Qatar Airways to recognize the new leadership of FIFA is working toward restoring the image of FIFA and that there is climate of trust that is really here to push for more partnerships.”

    Trust, according to Samoura, also comes through a new generation of officials being elected to the FIFA Council.

    “It’s a strong demonstration that gender empowerment,” Samoura said, pointing to Mahfuza Akhter of Bangladesh being elected on Tuesday as Asia’s female representative at FIFA.

    It was a surprise result. Moya Dodd, an outspoken critic of corruption and prominent champion of women’s football, lost to Akhter, who couldn’t name the Women’s World Cup holder in a post-election interview. American soccer stars Alex Morgan and Carli Lloyd were among those to express surprise at the setback for Dodd, an Australian lawyer who is still on the Asian Football Confederation executive committee.

    “I’m sure she will land on her feet somehow in football,” said Samoura, who was hired last year as FIFA’s first female secretary general. “She has football in her heart and I’m sure that FIFA or another confederation or her home federation will continue to make good use of her skills.”

    Those skills were used by a reform committee in 2015 that helped to reshape FIFA following the U.S. Department of Justice indictments of soccer officials.

    The progress of some reforms, however, appears to have stalled — despite Infantino helping to draft them in the FIFA-appointed advisory panel while he was a presidential candidate.

    Power should have drained from the presidency to the CEO-like secretary general, but Infantino has retained a Blatter-like grip on executive authority. A new FIFA Bureau that was not on the reform program now has given more authority to Infantino and the six regional confederation leaders, whose decisions need not be ratified by a 37-strong council that replaced the discredited executive committee.

    “That can be the appearance,” CONCACAF President Victor Montagliani said, “but I think the collaborations at the council level and the discussions are quite healthy. The bureau is there to act in between when the council meets. If there are decisions that are needed on a timely basis for operational issues they have to be made.”

    The most recent addition to the bureau and council is Ahmad Ahmad, who ended Issa Hayatou’s 29-year grip on power in Africa in March.

    But the FIFA vice president has unwelcome links to the tainted old regime. Email correspondence between Ahmad and an aide to disgraced former FIFA presidential candidate Mohamed bin Hammam of Qatar was published by British newspaper The Sunday Times in 2014. The emails from 2010 detailed Ahmad reminding Bin Hammam that he promised money to help Ahmad’s re-election campaign to lead the Madagascar federation. The Bin Hammam aide who Ahmad was emailing was banned for life by the FIFA ethics committee in January for involvement in unethical payments made to soccer officials.

    “If it’s your idea, take it, give it,” Ahmad responded vaguely when asked about the payments on Wednesday. “Ask him. Don’t ask me.”

    FIFA has lost two officials recently following fresh American revelations about wrongdoing.

    FIFA audit committee member Richard Lai, an American citizen from Guam, pleaded guilty to wire fraud conspiracy charges related to taking around $1 million in bribes including at least $850,000 from Kuwaiti officials. The cash was to buy influence and help recruit other Asian soccer officials prepared to take bribes, Lai said in court in New York.

    Kuwaiti powerbroker Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah was implicated in the investigation and, despite maintaining his innocence, he quit the election to regain his seat on the FIFA Council this week.


    Lai is under a formal FIFA ethics investigation, and the claims against Sheikh Ahmad will also be scrutinized.

    But the fate of the independent ethics officials who have convicted corrupt FIFA officials is also uncertain.

    There has been speculation that Hans-Joachim Eckert, the ethics judge who brought down Blatter, could be replaced along with ethics investigator Cornel Borbely. They must seek re-election at Thursday’s congress but FIFA has repeatedly declined to provide lists of candidates to lead its judicial bodies.

    Infantino is suspected of a personal motive to install new ethics leadership, although he hasn’t called for Eckert and Borbely to go. The former UEFA general secretary was frustrated that he faced an ethics investigation last year for his use of private jets early in his presidency.

    The case cast doubt over the “new era” in FIFA proclaimed last year by Infantino. The old FIFA ways continue to seem hard to shake off.

    #2
    Fifa's newly elected female official criticised for struggling to name current women's world champions

    This is who AFC elected. This is why as bad as IFF is, I don't blame them for all the shit that happens in the AFC. Its a crooked organization being run with funds that even in a corruption free Iran we wouldn't have to spend on this stuff.


    http://www.independent.co.uk/sport/f...-a7725201.html

    The newly elected representative for Asian football on the Fifa council has been heavily criticised after failing to name the current women’s world champions.

    Mahfuza Akhter Kiron of Bangladesh overcame the prominent women’s football advocate Moya Dodd in a bid to gain a place on Fifa’s ruling body on Monday.

    Kiron beat Dodd by 27 votes to 17 after two other candidates for the woman's slot representing Asia on the Fifa Council withdrew before the ballot.

    Lloyd's fight on many fronts reveals the fire that resides within
    And Kiron's term has begun on a controversial note after she struggled to name the current world champions when interviewed by the BBC’s World Service.

    When asked, Kiron answered “Korea” followed by “Japan”, before finally settling on the correct answer: the USA.

    "This is very disappointing," said two-time World Cup winner Carli Lloyd after the embarrassing gaffe.

    Earlier, Kiron had beaten Dodd to the representative position. Dodd had previously been a co-opted member of Fifa's old executive committee and was a leading voice promoting women's soccer within the global body.

    “Naturally it is disappointing. I'd hoped I had done enough in the few years I was part of Fifa to persuade people that I should have another shot at it,” Dodd told reporters.

    “I think I will always be an advocate for women's football...here are still a lot of ways to contribute. I am still a member of the AFC executive committee and of the board in Australia and I have other involvements,” she added.

    Australia has only been a part of the AFC since 2006 having previously been in the Oceania confederation and Dodd's loss could be viewed as an indication of the country's political weakness in Asian soccer.

    Kiron is a member of the AFC's executive committee and women's football committee.

    “This is like a dream come true,” she said. “I've always wanted to do something for Asian women's football. Now I have the platform to do something.”

    Dodd, a former Australia national team player, was looking to regain her place in the Fifa leadership after her spell as a co-opted member of the old executive ended with the creation of the new Fifa Council in 2016.

    The candidates for the three available Asian positions on the Fifa Council were all elected unopposed with Chinese Football Association general secretary Zhang Jian, South Korea's Chung Mong-gyu and Mariana V Araneta Jr of the Philippines all joining Fifa's ruling body.

    Olympic Council of Asia president Sheikh Ahmad withdrew from the elections after he stood down from all soccer positions following reports linking him with a U.S Department of Justice investigation into bribery.

    Sheikh Ahmad has denied any wrongdoing.

    FIFA is holding its congress in the Bahraini capital on Thursday.

    Comment


      #3
      Are these things news to you?

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by PersianLegion View Post
        Are these things news to you?
        No, but I just like to point it out for the few good hearted people out there who think AFC and FIFA are meritocracies.

        Comment


          #5
          "Unfortunate co-incidence news of Fifa's Pogba probe leaks at same time as it ditches ethics chiefs... Only one will make global headlines."
          https://www.reddit.com/r/soccer/comm...s_pogba_probe/

          The ethics chiefs Fifa just ousted were looking into "hundreds" of cases of alleged wrongdoing within the organisation, some involving senior officials - BBC
          https://www.reddit.com/r/soccer/comm..._were_looking/

          "Woman Who Doesn’t Know Who Won Most Recent Women’s World Cup Elected To FIFA Council"
          https://www.reddit.com/r/worldcup/co...recent_womens/


          S - E - C - U - L - A - R - I - S - M

          Comment


            #6
            Sad but true but I switched to American Football (NFL and College Football) long time ago.
            Except when TM is playing or final stages of the WC.
            I am sadly done with AFC, FIFA etc as a whole.
            CHECK OUT OUR FORUM RULES HERE: http://www.persianfootball.com/forums/faq.php




            Don't Select Players That Suit Your Tactics; Select A Tactic That Suits Your Players !!!

            Comment


              #7
              Thanks for the article. Corruption disgusts me.

              Comment


                #8
                Good article. Basically as corrupt as we all believe it is. We have no hope in such a confederation.

                http://www.foxsportsasia.com/footbal...mes-ugly-side/

                AFC election exposes ugly side of beautiful game in Asia
                Monday’s AFC election for a female member of the FIFA Council is a sad indictment of everything that’s wrong with football in Asia, according to Scott McIntyre.

                by Scott McIntyre
                @mcintinhos

                Over the past half decade Asian football has lost more officials to bribery and corruption scandals than they’ve actually held major football tournaments and yet despite all this the backroom dealings continue to promote and protect those in power to the detriment of the actual game.

                This week in Bahrain saw the latest sorry chapter in the history of the AFC when the confederation opted to elect as one of their seven voices on the FIFA Council a woman, Mahfuza Akhter Kiron, who, now famously, can’t name either the current Asian or World champions.

                In turn they overlooked the other contender, Moya Dodd, who aside from being a former international player and highly regarded lawyer, is someone that has an extensive track record in the sport of fighting for and enacting genuine change that has opened the game to millions of people, especially women and girls, across the footballing planet.

                One is an open advocate for progression, change and development of a sport that she’s spent her entire life in while the other is a figure shrouded in mystery with no clear track record of any major achievements in her time in the sport.

                Moya Dodd has done a lot for women’s football.

                Nobody at all is under any illusion whatsoever that Kiron was elected on merit; this was a political ploy by the same group of ‘powerbrokers’ that have for far too long held sway over Asian politics to have ‘their’ people put in place.

                Indeed, it was curious to see some well-known ‘international advisers’ being granted VIP seats for the congress in Bahrain this week where the elections took place.

                These are the same group of ‘colourful characters’ that have worked in the background for years in Asia, all the while focusing more on politics than the game.

                Several years ago I was in Malaysia to cover a very similar election to this one and the same group of advisers and fixers then are still largely in place now and some of the ways they operate are beyond comprehension of the normal fan who simply wants to either watch or play the game.

                On that occasion in Malaysia I was put in touch with a mysterious group of European-based ‘private investigators’ who had been employed by one side to dig up whatever dirt they could on the other.

                That included tip-offs, which I followed through, of both brown paper bags being placed under the hotel doors of those voting in the election as well as late night visits from ladies of a certain persuasion – both of which I witnessed first hand on multiple occasions.

                Astonishingly, it also included a ‘honey pot’ ruse where they arranged for another attractive woman to sleep with one of the candidates and glean information they could then use against him – to most people this sounds like the plot of some thriller movie but this is the reality about how politics operates in Asian football.

                To complete the bizarre nature of the whole experience, on one occasion when I called our friend the investigator instead of hanging up he accidentally switched his phone to loud speaker whilst he was in the middle of a ‘tryst’ with the honey-pot woman who was supposed to be off charming the contenders….you honestly can’t make this stuff up!

                As one of those ‘disgraced’ candidates who is no longer involved in the game told me recently for the majority in Asia it’s all about power and politics and you simply get ‘caught up in it.’

                These are the same group of men who sit around smoke-filled bars drinking 500-dollar bottles of whisky – despite their religion prohibiting it for many of them – wheeling and dealing and if the conversation accidentally falls to football you’d be stunned.

                I’ve met dozens and dozens of these people over the years and all with roughly the same knowledge of the game as the Bangladeshi, Kiron, who is now one of Asia’s most influential voices.

                So, just how did this woman with little knowledge of the area of the game she claims to represent come to be elected?

                Kiron has a very close personal relationship – some might say too close – with the head of her nation’s football association, Kazi Salahuddin, and with a deal being put in place that he was unable to contest this election due to his chairmanship of the South Asian regional bloc they instead honed in on Kiron contesting the spot reserved for a female member.

                It’s no secret that Salahuddin has close ties with the AFC President Sheikh Salman and in turn with his Kuwaiti backers, the kingpin of which, Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, has now thankfully stood down from his public roles.

                Not clearly though his private ones, and with the rumour mill swirling that he was actually in Bahrain during the vote he and his people clearly did their work.

                By his people, I mean the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA), a body that he heads and who hold enormous sway over the game in Asia.

                Put simply, if you want to get elected at virtually any level, you have to deal with these shady types, in their shady rooms and quiet often put up with their shady attire.

                The shame in all of this is that there are, despite all the obstacles, good people still involved in the AFC trying to do what they can, but their number is dwindling as the OCA influence tightens its grip on a region where their money and their influence speak volumes.

                At the same time that all these political ploys are being devised we have a body that doesn’t seem to be able to effectively discipline rogue clubs, players or officials and not even effectively promote their own flagship tournament, the Asian Champions League which has been mired in scandal ever since the AFC tried to sneak the defending champion, Jeonbuk Hyundai, into this year’s tournament despite it flouting their very own regulations.

                What these rich men in their expensive rooms fail to grasp though is that this is the game of the people, a sport beloved by millions across Asia whose voice they are now entrusting to a political pawn – and that’s leaving aside some of the others who also sit on the FIFA Council from Asia.

                What they also fail to grasp is that just as we’ve seen at FIFA there is now a huge collection of investigators, informants and journalists rising to say enough is enough.

                Players, fans and sponsors are sick to death of rich businessman and royalty using our game as their plaything and the longer they brazenly continue to thumb their noses at those who the game belongs to the harder their fall – and that of the array of staff who protect them – will be when it comes.

                Comment

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