Presidential
hopefuls have until midnight on Monday to submit their candidacies for approval
(Getty Images)
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The race for the FIFA top
job is on, with presidential hopefuls had until midnight Monday to submit their
candidacies for approval. Liberia Football Association President Musa Bility says his
campaign team has successfully submitted his for the February elections.
The
48-year-old's campaign manager, Edwin Snowe, met with FIFA's acting secretary
general Marcus Kattner this morning at the world governing body's headquarters
in Zurich.
Bility
has received the backing of the five member associations necessary to stand,
which have been passed on to FIFA's Electoral Committee.
"I
am a very happy man," Bility told BBC Sport from his base in Liberia.
FIFA has confirmed to the
BBC that it has received Mr Bility's application.
Reuters
reports that Liberian Football Association president Musa Bility, one of eight
potential candidates for the FIFA presidency, says he presents the only
credible option for the leadership of world football's governing body.
Bility
said he had received the requisite five nominations, which had come from
outside the West African region, in order to stand after nominations closed on
Monday for the FIFA election, scheduled to take place in Zurich on Feb. 26 to
replace outgoing head Sepp Blatter.
The
African Football Confederation (CAF) has declined to endorse Bility's bid to
stand for the election.
"I
don't see any real challengers because all the others who are running have
played some part (in FIFA affairs) and if we have to reform football, none of
them should be given the right to run the organisation," he told the BBC
in an interview broadcast on Tuesday.
"They
themselves have caused the problems we have today. So they cannot be a
solution."
Asian
Football Confederation president Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa of
Bahrain, suspended UEFA president Michel Platini, UEFA General Secretary Gianni
Infantino, South African politician Tokyo Sexwale, former Trinidad and Tobago
midfielder David Nakhid, former FIFA deputy general secretary Jerome Champagne
and former FIFA vice president Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan are the
other candidates.
Bility
said he could step aside if Africa endorsed Sexwale.
"I
previously said that if we have more than one African in the race and if then
CAF have a meeting with me and say they want to support the other person, I
will also do so."
Bility
said he would be putting together an 'international coalition' at a meeting in
the Ivory Coast this weekend.
"We
are very happy that we've crossed the line and looking forward to a really
robust campaign. It's quite exciting. This is a campaign we are committed to.
It's funded very well," he said without giving details.
Bility,
who has headed the Liberian Football Association since 2010, has been seen as a
fringe candidate with little international profile but being able to garner
nominations has thrust him into the mainstream of the race for control of world
foootball's governing body.
FIFA
is embroiled in the worst scandal of its 111-year history, the United States
having indicted several FIFA officials for bribery, money laundering and wire
fraud in May.
Swiss
authorities are also investigating the decision to award the 2018 and 2022
World Cups to Russia and Qatar respectively.
Earlier this month, FIFA
president Sepp Blatter and Platini, who had been favourite to succeed him, were
suspended for 90 days pending a full investigation by FIFA's Ethics Committee.
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