Sheikh Salman is a member of the Bahrain royal
family and has attracted opposition from human rights organisations due to the
regime's role in the suppression of the country's pro-democracy demonstrations
in 2011, which saw some footballers imprisoned and allegedly tortured. He has
denied any involvement but Prince Ali told a news conference in Geneva: “The simple, basic fact of the matter is that
person did not protect or stick up for his players at that time”. Sheikh
Salman has insisted he has never played a role in Bahrain's government and
played no part in the detainment or mistreatment of any individuals. Prince
Ali's comments will intensify the rivalry ahead of the election of Sepp Blatter's successor on February
26. Three other candidates, UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino, France's Jerome
Champagne and Tokyo Sexwale of
South Africa are also standing.
Prince Ali insisted he was a genuinely independent
candidate who would ensure that FIFA had the proper reforms saying “This election will determine whether a small
group of powerful individuals will hold FIFA hostage”. The prince said if
elected he would contact the US and Swiss attorney generals to offer the world
governing body's full co-operation into their investigations into FIFA-related
corruption. Prince Ali brought along Musa
Bility, the Liberian FA president who was prevented from standing for the
FIFA election after failing integrity checks, to the news conference.
Bility claimed there was interference or intimidation over the African football
confederation's (CAF) executive committee's announcement last week that it has
endorsed Sheikh Salman. He insisted the CAF's decision did not bind any African
country to support the sheikh.

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