Manama // Fifa president Sepp Blatter will take a big step towards a fifth term in office when he watches Asia’s football chief, a key ally, seal re-election unopposed on Thursday.
Just four weeks before Fifa’s presidential vote, Blatter can shore up crucial Asian support when he addresses the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) congress in Bahrain.
It is likely to be a triumphant trip for the Swiss, 79, with AFC president Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa, a vocal supporter, set to be handed a fresh, four-year term.
Kuwaiti Sheikh Ahmad Al Fahad Al Sabah — who is the president of the Olympic Council of Asia and an International Olympic Committee member — also looks likely to win one of three seats on Fifa’s executive committee which are up for grabs.
Meanwhile, Blatter’s presidential rival Prince Ali bin Al Hussein will lose his post as a Fifa vice president, which is being absorbed into the Asian leader’s job title.
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Blatter has already been assured of African support for the May 29 Fifa election, and with Asia’s 46 votes he would be all but at the finish line.
His rivals — Jordan’s Prince Ali, Dutchman Michael van Praag and former World Player of the Year Luis Figo — face a last-minute scramble for support ahead of the ballot in Zurich.
Sheikh Salman will tighten what is becoming an iron grip on Asian football when his first full term is rubber-stamped by the congress in his home country of Bahrain.
He swept to power in 2013 while promising a clean slate after his predecessor, Mohamed bin Hammam, was banned from football over charges of alleged bribery and financial wrongdoing.
The past could still haunt the AFC, however, after general secretary Alex Soosay faced accusations related to the former regime under disgraced Qatari Bin Hammam.
According to a video interview that was seen by a Malaysian newspaper, an AFC employee said Soosay asked him to tamper with or destroy documents during an investigation.
No comment was immediately available from Soosay, although the report said he had dismissed the video as a smear attempt.
The AFC is breaking with tradition by holding the congress in Sheikh Salman’s stronghold of Manama rather than the Malaysian capital Kuala Lumpur, where the AFC is based.
It has also done away with its usual executive committee meeting the day before the congress, meaning proceedings will focus squarely on voting.
Five AFC vice presidents will be decided, plus 11 executive committee members. Australia’s Moya Dodd and Afghan Zohra Mehri are among five mandatory female exco appointments.
But the bigger picture is Asia’s support for Blatter, which looks set to help keep him at the head of world football despite a series of controversies, notably over Qatar’s hosting of the 2022 World Cup.
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