Qatar has no business coming to Queensland

 
Jesse Fink Roar Guru

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A few months back your Roar correspondent wrote a column about the disgraceful decision of FIFA, football’s world governing body, to not take any action against the Qatar Football Association for fielding an ineligible player during the just completed third round of Asian World Cup qualifying.

Qatar is in Australia’s group in the final elimination round for the Asian Football Confederation’s four automatic spots (and one half spot) at South Africa 2010 and is currently leading the group of five on four points with two games played.

Australia, one game in, is on three points. Both meet in Brisbane next month.

The reality, of course, at least as any fair-minded football follower is concerned, is that Qatar shouldn’t be there at all. Instead it is the Iraqis who should be facing off against Pim Verbeek’s Socceroos.

But all FIFA decided to do when faced with a clear breach of its own rules (to wit: a team “found guilty of fielding an ineligible player shall forfeit the match in question”) was let the Qataris get off on a technicality for its fielding of the Brazilian Emerson in March in a WCQ.

That technicality was the timing of the complaint. Any protest was to be delivered 24 hours before the match in question.

The Iraqis complained three months later.

Really it shouldn’t be an issue, but FIFA, politically motivated, always find a way to help West Asian teams when they’re in a pickle. (While on the topic, what strikes me most about the absurdity of that clause is that coaches, by habit, tend to release their teamsheets or starting line-ups as late as possible. It is asking a lot for the affected federation in question to be able to file their protest, with all the necessary paperwork, the moment they know the make-up of the team they’ll be facing. Such things tend to take quite a bit of time.)

In a just world, the onus should have been on the Qataris to play by the rules, not for Iraq to have a forensic knowledge of the statutes and their myriad intricacies and loopholes.

But we don’t live in a just world. Especially when it comes to international football.

To cut a long and boring story short, the Iraqis didn’t accept FIFA’s decision and they were right not to.

So they took their case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland, a body that normally rights wrongs and lends some commonsense to disputes such as these.

Understandably, the Iraq FA asked FIFA to postpone the qualifying rounds featuring Qatar until a determination was made but were rebuffed. The Qataris, not surprisingly, wanted the games to go ahead and were – shake me down – granted their wish.

From beginning to end, FIFA has well and truly screwed the Iraqis.

However, what is surprising is that Iraq has been let down by the CAS as well.

Rather than address the situation immediately the CAS has delayed making any decision and probably won’t announce its finding until for another fortnight, with no clear date set for the announcement.

It could happen before or after the WCQ in Brisbane.

The only explanation they have proffered for their tardiness is, according to CAS Secretary-General Matthieu Reeb, “there was no request by the parties involved for an urgent release of the court’s findings”.

Another case of the Iraq FA expecting professionalism, swiftness, diligence and natural justice from the authorities but being punished for procedural oversight.

It’s a total crock. The Iraqi people have copped enough injustice over the past decade. And it looks like there isn’t going to be any let-up any time soon.

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