04/18/24 05:05:00
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04/18 05:04 CDT Israeli soccer facing Palestinian calls for action by FIFA at
annual congress
Israeli soccer facing Palestinian calls for action by FIFA at annual congress
By GRAHAM DUNBAR
AP Sports Writer
GENEVA (AP) --- Calls for action against Israel in international soccer because
of the conflict with Hamas will be stepped up by Palestinian officials at the
annual FIFA congress next month.
The Palestine Football Association proposal to 211 member federations in
Thailand calls for "appropriate sanctions, with immediate effect, against
Israeli teams," according to FIFA documents released late Wednesday, one month
before the May 17 meeting.
The motion notes "international law violations committed by the Israeli
occupation in Palestine, particularly in Gaza" and cites FIFA statutory
commitments on human rights and against discrimination.
"All the football infrastructure in Gaza has been either destroyed, or
seriously damaged, including the historic stadium of Al-Yarmuk," the Palestine
FA wrote, claiming support for the congress motion from the federations of
Algeria, Iraq, Jordan, Syria and Yemen.
The latest call to punish Israel soccer will not be supported by FIFA and is
unlikely to make progress because Israel can expect global backing including
from the 55-member European soccer body UEFA it joined 30 years ago. A
cooperation deal also was signed last week between Israeli officials and the
South American soccer body CONMEBOL.
Palestinian soccer cites the example of Russian teams being banned from
international competitions by FIFA and UEFA during the military invasion of
Ukraine that started in February 2022.
Russia's exclusion was supported by FIFA because several UEFA members refused
to play games against Russian opponents. They included all three men's national
teams -- Poland, Sweden, Czech Republic -- who were in a qualifying playoffs
bracket in March 2022 for the men's World Cup that year. Russia did not play
and Poland advanced to the tournament in Qatar.
Russian officials continue to take part in international soccer meetings,
including the executive committee of UEFA, and should have a delegation with
FIFA in Bangkok next month.
Israeli national and club teams have continued to play in UEFA competitions
since the Oct. 7 attacks by Hamas, though home games were played in neutral
Hungary and Cyprus for security reasons.
At the Paris Olympics opening in July, Israel will play in the men's soccer
tournament and took part in the tournament draw last month. Israel was drawn in
a group to play Mali, which is a Muslim-majority nation, Paraguay and an Asian
team yet to be decided.
The Palestine FA said in its proposal to FIFA: "There is a good chance that
some football associations will refuse to play against Israel."
Last year, Indonesia was stripped by FIFA of hosting the men's Under-20 World
Cup because it refused to host games for Israel which qualified several months
earlier. The tournament moved to Argentina and Israel reached the semifinals.
Within weeks, FIFA compensated Indonesia with hosting rights for the men's
Under-17 World Cup played late last year.
The soccer dispute between the Palestinians and Israelis was put on the FIFA
agenda repeatedly from 2013-17, including at congresses, without making
significant progress.
Palestinian soccer leader Jibril Rajoub urged FIFA at the congress in 2015 and
2017 to sanction Israel for incorporating into its national leagues teams that
played games on disputed territory in the West Bank.
The latest proposal again cites Israel's "violation of the FIFA Statutes
manifest in its continued inclusion of football teams located on the territory
of another association (Palestine) in its national league."
FIFA under president Gianni Infantino and his predecessor Sepp Blatter has not
held Israeli soccer responsible for actions by the national government,
including security policy that has limited travel for Palestinian players.
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