Thursday November 23, 11:49 PM
FIFA suspends Iran from all international football
ZURICH (Reuters) - Iran has been suspended from all
international football activity because of government
interference in running the game in the country, world ruling
body FIFA said on Thursday.
The move comes just five months after Iran took part in the
World Cup finals in Germany and a week after they secured a
place in the 2008 Asian Cup finals, winning their qualifying
group by beating South Korea 2-0 in Tehran.
An Iranian news agency said Iran did not accept the
decision and described it as "completely illegitimate". Fans in
the football-mad country were stunned.
"I am totally shocked because I love football and I always
follow the Iranian national football squad with 100 percent
enthusiasm," said Hassan Alizad, a 43-year-old driver, who had
revelled in Iran's success at reaching the Asian Cup finals.
"It will break a streak of honours," he said.
Mohsen Jamali, a 45-year-old barber and football fanatic,
said: "I feel injured at hearing this news...I still hope that
somehow the decision will be reversed."
FIFA's Emergency Committee, composed of FIFA President Sepp
Blatter and one representative of each of the six FIFA
confederations took the decision at a meeting on Wednesday.
In a statement FIFA said they had decided to "suspend the
Islamic Republic of Iran Football Federation (IRIFF) from all
international activity due to government interference in
football matters and violation of Article 17 of the FIFA
Statutes."
Article 17 relates to the independence of FAs free of any
government interference.
NEW ELECTIONS
The FIFA statement continued: "The FIFA Emergency Committee
took this decision after determining that the IRIFF was not
adhering to the principles of the FIFA Statutes regarding the
independence of member associations, the independence of the
decision-making process of the football governing body in each
country and the way in which changes in the leadership of
associations are brought about."
FIFA is demanding the establishment of an IRIFF
Normalisation Committee appointed by FIFA and the Asian
Football Confederation (AFC). It also wants the IRIFF to draft
new statutes and organise new elections.
"Iran will definitely not accept the decision. FIFA wants
to put pressure on Iranian football," Iran's Mehr News Agency
quoted an informed source as saying, describing the move as
"completely illegitimate".
In August 2006, FIFA and the AFC gave the Iranian
federation a deadline of November15 to reinstate elected
president Mohammad Dadkan and to comply with the relevant
provisions of the FIFA Statutes.
As this deadline was not met, Iran has been suspended.
A former Iranian federation employee, who left with Dadkan,
said: "When they appoint a person who knows nothing about
sports as the head of physical education (Dadkan's boss) this
is the result."
"This shows (Iran's) mismanagement," the former employee,
who asked not to be named, told Reuters.
Iran are the second country to face such action in the
space of a month. Kenya were suspended on October 24 for
failing to respect signed agreements and for recurrent problems
in its football federation.
"When (President Mahmoud) Ahmadinejad won the elections,
they started to change all the managers including football
managers. This is the result of having inexperienced people,"
said football fan Reza, who asked not to be identified further.
Ahmadinejad won the presidential race in 2005 and has
replaced many officials in a range of institutions since taking
office, drawing criticism from opponents who say the new
appointments are often inexperienced.
The president dismisses such charges.
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