Prince Ali bin Al Hussein believes he will win next year's FIFA presidential election if the ballot is carried out properly.
Prince Ali bin Al Hussein believes he will win next year's FIFA presidential election if the ballot is carried out properly.
Having
lost to outgoing suspended president Sepp Blatter in May's vote, Prince
Ali is standing again in February's election after Blatter laid down
his mandate on June 2, just six days after nine FIFA officials were
indicted on charges of racketeering conspiracy and corruption.
Blatter has since been handed a provisional 90-day ban from all football-related activities by FIFA's ethics committee.
His
suspension came after a criminal investigation was opened into
allegations he sold a World Cup TV rights contract to former FIFA
official Jack Warner in a deal that was unfavourable for FIFA and that
the 79-year-old made a disloyal payment of two million Swiss francs to
Michel Platini, who - along with general secretary Jerome Valcke - was
also given a provisional ban following the corruption claims.
Earlier
this week the United States Department of Justice announced the
indictment of a further 16 officials, while attorney general Loretta
Lynch revealed eight individuals linked to FIFA had pleaded guilty to
charges.
Prince Ali will is set to contest the
election against Salman Bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa, Jerome Champagne, Tokyo
Sexwale and Gianni Infantino.
And, speaking at
a National Press Club lunch in Washington DC, Prince Ali said: "I am
running for the FIFA presidency because I believe that football deserves
a governing body that is worthy of the game, I'm running because I want
to see the day when the questions for a FIFA presidential candidate at a
national press conference club luncheon are about football and not
about controversies.
"The main meeting room for
the executive committee is three stories underground, grey and with no
natural light. That setting was symptomatic of FIFA's entire approach to
governance and its outlook. I want to work with member associations to
build a structure and a culture at FIFA that is outward looking and
operates in accordance with practices that fit with the 21st century.
"As a first step, we need to adopt principles of good governance and transparency in actions and not just in words.
"I
will immediately take steps to publish the minutes of executive
committee meetings, making sure they are accurate and institute proper
disclosure of financial information, I will also make public the full
findings of the Garcia report [into corruption in football].
"These
steps cannot be called reform, nor be seen as an achievement, they are
the most basic set of acceptable norms of good governance today.
"At
the end of the day I believe that if things are done correctly and each
national association has the right, without pressure, to make their own
decisions, then I think I will be the candidate who wins this
election."
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