Despite being a provisional member
of UEFA, Gibraltar is being denied the chance to play international friendly
matches due to a farcical mix-up between the European body and FIFA.
In March, the Gibraltar Football
Association (GFA) agreed a roadmap with UEFA that has seen teams from the
British colony entered into European tournaments at Under-17 and Under-19 level
and qualifiers for the 2014 Futsal championships.
The road map accorded Gibraltar
provisional membership of UEFA and the GFA’s long standing application to join
the European body will go to a vote at the European body’s congress in London
in May 2013.
But a planned international
friendly for Gibraltar in early 2013 as part of the roadmap agreed between UEFA
and the GFA has come to nothing.
When questioned why this game
would not now go ahead, a UEFA spokesperson said: “International friendlies are
under FIFA jurisdiction. For all these matters please contact FIFA directly as
they are under their jurisdiction.”
When FIFA was contacted and asked
why Gibraltar was being denied the chance to play international friendlies, a
FIFA spokesman said: “Currently the issue of Gibraltar playing international
matches is with UEFA. Having checked internally to make sure, FIFA until today
has received no such request from Gibraltar.”
The GFA declined to comment on
UEFA or FIFA’s comments, but a huge swathe of other teams on the fringes of the
international game regularly play matches, often against FIFA members.
Only last week Martinique and
French Guiana played against FIFA members Jamaica and Cuba in the 2012
Caribbean Cup finals. Neither of the French overseas territories are members of
FIFA, nor is the Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands, which is only an
associate member of the Asian Football Confederation yet played FIFA member
Guam in an international on November 24.
On March 11 2011, Gibraltar beat
the Faroe Islands (a UEFA and FIFA member) 3-0 in a friendly on the Rock.
Although Gibraltar is not expected to send a football team to the Island Games in Bermuda in 2013, should the GFA do so there is every likelihood a Rock XI would play the hosts and the Cayman Islands, both of whom are FIFA members.
Although Gibraltar is not expected to send a football team to the Island Games in Bermuda in 2013, should the GFA do so there is every likelihood a Rock XI would play the hosts and the Cayman Islands, both of whom are FIFA members.
Privately, the GFA must be
concerned that the latest twist in an attempt to join UEFA that has been
dragging on since the late 1990s is somehow connected to Kosovo’s equally
controversial ambitions to play at international level.
Although 56% of FIFA’s members
recognise Kosovo, the former Yugoslav Republic is not a member of the United
Nations – UEFA’s membership criteria - so cannot join UEFA, whose president
Michel Platini has appeased Serbia and Russian opposition to Kosovo’s
international ambitions by sticking to the letter of that rule.
This Autumn, FIFA president Sepp
Blatter over-ruled Platini and insisted that a Kosovan request to at least play
international friendlies should be granted. Blatter’s ruling was belatedly and
only partially acknowledged at the recent FIFA meeting in Tokyo, where Kosovan
sides at junior, amateur and female level were given the chance to play
internationally. So can clubs, but the senior national team remain barred.
For Gibraltar, the concern must be
that UEFA is preparing plans for a two-speed membership simply to placate the
likes of Spain, Serbia and Russia ahead of Platini’s expected bid to succeed
Blatter when he retires in 2015.
There is furious Spanish
opposition to Gibraltar’s membership, particularly from Ángel María Villar
Llona, the influential head of the Spanish association, the RFEF. This could
produce serious fractures in relations at the upper echelons at UEFA but
Platini appears resigned to Gibraltar joining the European elite next May.
The GFA’s bid pre-dates a change
to UEFA’s statutes that require all new members to be recognised by the UN.
UEFA’s exclusion of Gibraltar has twice been upheld as unreasonable by the
Court of Arbitration for Sport (TAS) and Spanish media reports claim that Platini recently told journalists:
“We're obliged to include Gibraltar because that is what the Court of
Arbitration for Sport is asking us to do"
"For that reason, we'll have
to ask the Congress in London to accept the decision. That's why we don't deal
with the cases of Kosovo or Catalunya. But Gibraltar's membership application
predates 2001, so the rule does not apply. We now however, have TAS's ruling
which obliges us to recommend Gibraltar's admittance and that is what we will
have to do.”
With that in mind, UEFA’s apparent
attempt to prevent Gibraltar from playing international friendlies looks both
ridiculous and spiteful.
1 comment:
Are the reports true that the UEFA violates the CAS ruling in case they don't accept GIB as full member in May?
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