The woman behind FIFA's poppy ban: Senegalese pen-pusher, 54, is revealed as the enforcer stopping footballers paying tribute to war dead as Theresa May brands the stance 'utterly outrageous'
The
Fifa official enforcing a ban on England and Scotland players wearing
poppies during an Armistice Day football match is a Senegalese
bureaucrat brought in to make the scandal-hit organisation look more
transparent.
Fifa
Secretary General Fatma Samoura will attend a meeting at Wembley this
week over the body's insistence that poppies designed to commemorate the
fallen are a 'political symbol' and are thus not allowed.
Despite
outrage over the ban, the two teams fear they could face hefty fines or
even point deductions in their bids to reach the World Cup if they
flout the governing body's rules and commemorate the fallen.
Prime
Minister Theresa May today condemned Fifa over the 'utterly outrageous'
ban, telling the scandal-hit body to get its own house in order before
telling others what to do.
FIFA Secretary General Fatma Samoura
is set to attend a crunch meeting over whether England and Scotland
players can wear poppies during an Armistice Day football match
Samoura was brought in by new Fifa
president Gianni Infantino despite question marks over whether she had
the experience for the job
Samoura
has issued Fifa's only response to growing fury in Britain over the
decree, writing a letter in which she 'drew attention to law four',
which states that 'political or religious messages' are banned from team
shirts.
Samoura
sparked anger among some in Fifa when she was parachuted into the
£1million-a-year role by the organisation's new president Gianni
Infantino in May.
She
was handed the Secretary General position despite having no real
experience in handling sport, having previously worked in a humanitarian
role at the UN.
The
54-year-old's appointment came as world football's governing body
desperately tried to rescue its reputation, after a number of former
officials were arrested on corruption charges and former president Sepp
Blatter was placed under criminal investigation.
There was also widespread anger at the organisation for awarding the 2022 World Cup to Qatar amid allegations of bribery.
Appointing
Samoura to the role, Infantino insisted she understood 'transparency
and accountability' and praised her 'experience and vision'. But others
wondered if, having never worked in football before, she was being set
up to fail.
England
players were previously allowed to wear poppies on armbands and on
their training tops due to Fifa rules over 'political symbols'
The English and Scottish FAs now want to know whether they can do the same again
Samoura,
who has a degree in English and Spanish from the University of Lyon,
started working for the UN's Food Programme in 1995. She was later sent
around the world to work for the organisation before becoming a
humanitarian administrator in Nigeria.
Five
months after taking her role at Fifa and promising a 'fresh approach',
she will now have to take a view on whether it should impose its poppy
ban on England, Scotland and Wales, who also to wear armbands during
their game against Serbia in Cardiff on November 12.
Samoura has previously worked in administrative roles for the UN
The
English and Scottish FAs are desperate to find out what sanction they
can expect if they flout the ban to allow players and fans to remember
those killed in conflict.
Responding to the row at Prime Minister's Questions today, Theresa May tore into football's governing body.
She said: 'I think the stance that has been taken by Fifa is utterly outrageous.
'Our
football players want to recognise and respect those who have given
their lives for our safety and security. I think it is absolutely right
that they should be able to do so.'
She
said it was a matter for the English and Scottish Football
Associations, but there was a 'clear message' from the House of Commons
that 'we want our players to be able to wear those poppies'.
And
in a direct message to world football's governing body, which has been
plagued by corruption allegations, she said: 'Before they start telling
us what to do, they jolly well ought to sort their own house out.'
The
campaign to overturn the ban has been backed by almost 200,000 people
in a petition on the change.org which urges Fifa to change its mind.
In Parliament today, PM Theresa May branded the poppy ban 'utterly outrageous'
Former
RAF pilot and prisoner of war John Nichol, who set up the petition,
said: 'The poppy is not a political statement at all. It could not be
further from a political statement.
'It
is a statement of remembrance and an acknowledgement of sacrifice from
the First World War right through to the sacrifices of our young men and
women today.'
Mr
Nichol said many service personnel were football fans, and the match
was an opportunity for the country to show 'how much we as a society
care about the work these heroes do'.
He
added: 'No-one should ever be banned from wearing a poppy and it brings
shame on Fifa that they continue to propagate this misunderstanding of
our heritage.'
Damian Collins, chairman of the Commons Sports Committee, said the ban was insulting to British fans.
Fans are furious that the ban will prevent the players from remembering the war dead
He
told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: 'I hope common sense prevails.
Fifa has strict rules banning political, religious or commercial symbols
from shirts. I think it is insulting to people in this country to say a
poppy is one of those sort of symbols.
'Someone
has shared with me on social media an Ireland football shirt that has a
special embroidery on marking the centenary of the Easter Rising.
'Fifa allow that, so I think people will find it astonishing that the poppy's not allowed.'
The
English FA is said to remain optimistic that a compromise can be
reached which would allow players to wear poppies on armbands for the
World Cup qualifier.
However,
Scottish FA chief executive Stewart Regan has told the BBC that Fifa
has already rejected the armband compromise and was 'sticking to the
letter of the law'.
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