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2026 FIFA World Cup
7JUN

Norway is first to back Infantino case

2 min read
10:36UTC

Norway's Lise Klaveness sent FIFA's Ethics Committee a letter of support for FairSquare's Article 15 complaint against Gianni Infantino, the first national federation to do so, six months after the FIFA Peace Prize award to Donald Trump.

SportDeveloping
Key takeaway

Norway broke six months of federation silence, giving the Infantino ethics complaint its first institutional backer.

The Norwegian Football Federation became the first national federation to formally back an ethics complaint against FIFA president Gianni Infantino 1. President Lise Klaveness sent a letter of support to FIFA's Ethics Committee on or before 2 June, behind a complaint the human-rights group FairSquare lodged on 8 December 2025. It argues Infantino's award of the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize to Donald Trump breached Article 15 of the Code of Ethics, the provision on political neutrality.

Human Rights Watch documented that award in its April host-city audit , and FairSquare's complaint has run since December. None of FIFA's 211 member federations had publicly challenged Infantino over it until now.

Klaveness was deliberate: "We are sending this letter alone." The Ethics Committee can act on a member complaint less easily than on an NGO filing, and Norway's letter converts an outside campaign into an internal one. FairSquare plans a "Reboot FIFA" mass-signatory resubmission after the tournament 2, with Norway's name now the precedent other federations can point to.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

In December 2025, FIFA president Gianni Infantino gave a special 'FIFA Peace Prize' to Donald Trump at the World Cup draw ceremony. A human rights group called FairSquare filed a complaint saying this broke FIFA's own rules on political neutrality; specifically Article 15 of its Code of Ethics, which says FIFA officials must stay out of politics. For six months, no national football federation backed the complaint. On or before 2 June 2026, Norway's football federation president Lise Klaveness sent a letter of support to FIFA's Ethics Committee. She was the first federation head to do so, and she noted that Norway sent the letter alone. The significance is procedural: a complaint backed by a member federation is harder for the Ethics Committee to ignore than one filed solely by an external human rights organisation.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

FIFA's Article 15 on political neutrality was designed to prevent FIFA from being used as a platform for individual governments' political agendas.

Infantino's award of the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize to a sitting US president who is simultaneously co-hosting the World Cup; at the World Cup draw hosted in the US; created a structural conflict between two FIFA obligations: the neutrality rule and the host-relationship obligations. Neither obligation explicitly overrides the other in the Code of Ethics.

The six-month silence from other federations reflects the same commercial logic that governs FIFA members generally: the US is the co-host, $13.1bn in revenue flows from this tournament, and any federation publicly challenging Infantino risks its allocation in future bidding processes.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Norway's letter may trigger a procedural obligation for the Ethics Committee to formally acknowledge the complaint as a member-association submission, rather than classifying it as an NGO filing.

    Short term · Reported
  • Opportunity

    FairSquare's post-tournament resubmission campaign now has a named institutional precedent; other federations can endorse without being the first mover.

    Medium term · Reported
  • Risk

    If the Ethics Committee ignores the Norway letter during the tournament, it produces a documented case of inaction against a member-association complaint, strengthening the post-tournament resubmission.

    Medium term · Assessed
First Reported In

Update #14 · Iran flies on a visa it doesn't have

Al Jazeera· 5 Jun 2026
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This Event
Norway is first to back Infantino case
The first crack in FIFA's internal silence came from a national federation rather than its Ethics Committee, raising the cost of continued inaction heading into the tournament.
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