FairSquare, a UK-based football-governance watchdog, resubmitted an ethics complaint against FIFA president Gianni Infantino on 30 June over the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize awarded to Donald Trump 1. FIFA, the sport's global governing body, created the award this year 2.
The complaint alleges that handing a national leader a FIFA award breaches the organisation's political-neutrality obligations under its own statutes 3. FairSquare, which researches human rights in football governance, had filed an earlier eight-page version in December that FIFA's ethics committee did not take up. Infantino, FIFA president since 2016, has cultivated a close public relationship with Trump across the American-hosted tournament.
A governing body that writes political neutrality into its statutes, then gives its first Peace Prize to a sitting head of state, invites exactly this kind of challenge. Whether FIFA's ethics committee treats the resubmission any differently is the open question, given the same committee declined the original.
