February 23, 2011  
PRESSURE BUILDS ON DISGRACED WORLD CUP BID CHIEF

(WFI) Up to 3,000 Indonesian fans have laid siege to the headquarters of the 
country's football federation (PSSI), demanding the removal of its president 
Nurdin Halid.

Local witnesses tell INSIDER that between 2-3,000 Indonesian fans rallied 
outside the PSSI offices at Jakarta's Senayan Stadium demanding Halid step 
down. The AFP news agency put the figure at 1,000.

Halid, a convicted fraudster who led the country's shambolic World Cup bid and 
who previously ran the PSSI from behind prison bars, is standing for a third 
term as PSSI president.

Anger at his running of Indonesian football intensified over the weekend when 
two of his chief rivals for the PSSI presidency were barred from standing 
against him. Army chief of staff, General George Toisutta, and oil tycoon, 
Arifin Panigoro, were excluded from the elections for as yet unspecified 
reasons by an electoral committee appointed by the PSSI's Executive Committee.

FIFA's Standard Electoral Code demands that commissions overseeing such 
elections are elected by the members of an association. 

But in a letter dated Feb. 9 from FIFA's director of member associations, 
Thierry Regenass, to PSSI general secretary Nugraha Besoes - subsequently 
leaked by the PSSI and seen by INSIDER - FIFA advises that "considering the 
tight deadlines" the PSSI executive "could also nominate them".

Regenass goes on to advise that "It is essential that the persons who will form 
the electoral commission are not members of the PSSI's Executive Committee and 
are not related to any of the candidates." 

However, the PSSI executive subsequently appointed Syarief Bastaman, a former 
colleague of Halid's on the failed World Cup bid committee, to oversee the 
commission. The first significant act in his new, purportedly independent, role 
was to exclude Halid's main rivals from standing.

Earlier this week, Indonesia's sports minister, Andi Mallarangeng, called on 
the PSSI to get its house in order and hinted that the government may be 
willing to step in. 

"The PSSI has clearly not complied with these regulations therefore the 
government calls on it to obey the regulations and therefore amend their 
approved list of candidates for PSSI chair," he was quoted by the Jakarta Post. 

He added that "the PSSI remains an Indonesian sports entity. The PSSI is 
subject to legislation and regulations in this country".

Some Indonesian football insiders believe that the PSSI is inviting government 
pressure so that FIFA will step in on their side. FIFA strictly forbids 
government interference in the running of football and ban associations where 
this happens. Others believe that a period on the international sidelines is 
the only remedy for the Indonesian game. 

Indonesia are currently 129th in the FIFA world rankings. Popular discontent 
with the PSSI led to the creation of a rebel Indonesian Premier League, which 
kicked off last month.

One source with in-depth knowledge of Indonesian football told INSIDER: "FIFA 
must know the roots of Indonesia's football problems and understand why 
Indonesian football community are so angry with the PSSI. They do not trust the 
PSSI any more as long as Nurdin Halid rules it."

The source said that "the most unacceptable problem" facing the game in the 
country was "deep-rooted corruption." 

"Above all, FIFA must help Indonesia to reform PSSI and to build better 
football in the country," he added.


By INSIDER's James Corbett 


http://worldfootballinsider.com/Story.aspx?id=34177

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