Congrats, Sepp Blatter, friend of Africa and foe of Euro-Atlantic supremacists

What you need to know:

  • Nobody supports corruption and Fifa certainly needs to clean up its act.
  • Under Blatter, Fifa has poured millions of dollars into the developing world to improve standards

World football governing body Fifa is the most democratic global institution of any significance.

Forget all the furious propaganda whipped up by Western media in the last few days.

No major global institution matches the transparency and fairness with which the head of Fifa is elected. At Fifa, every country, no matter how big or small, gets one vote. Contrast that with other major multilateral bodies.

How is the head of the World Bank picked? By one man. The President of the United States simply nominates the person the Americans feel should head the institution.

And the IMF? They claim on their website they have a rigorous procedure where the candidates are interviewed by a 24-member executive board.  

The truth is that the leaders of France and Germany meet and decide who gets the position.

At the United Nations, the five permanent members of the Security Council lobby one another and settle on someone from a small country to serve as secretary-general although a veto by any of them is decisive. (Kofi Annan reportedly had to convince Jacques Chirac that he spoke French so that Paris would not block him.)

This is the post-Second World War order dominated by Washington and Old Europe that Fifa does not respect.

At Fifa, every country’s vote counts. Andorra’s vote has the same weight as America’s. Togo is equal to England. Germany does not have more weight than Guinea Bissau.

Forget about corruption. What annoys the major countries is that this institution, which organises the most prestigious single tournament in the world, does not allow the Euro-Atlantic powers to call all the shots as they do in every other major institution where the bigger animals are more equal than others.

How dare Fifa executives award Russia the 2018 World Cup when the Brits had rolled out Prince William, David Beckham, David Cameron and company to plead for the hosting rights? Why pick Qatar while the mighty Americans and Australia were in the running?

How could they expose Europeans to the dangers of a “machete race war” in “the land of murder” as one British tabloid described South Africa before the 2010 World Cup?

PELE BY HIS SIDE

In 1974, Brazilian João Havelange discovered the power of Fifa’s democratic structure. He campaigned in 86 countries, with Pele by his side, and defeated Englishman Stanley Rous, becoming the first non-European to head the organisation.

Blatter learnt the trick from the Brazilian and succeeded him in 1998, running not as a Swiss candidate but as a standard bearer of smaller countries against Europe’s candidate, Lennart Johansson. Europe bitterly resents its diminished stature in Fifa.

Nobody supports corruption, and Fifa certainly needs to clean up its act. The Qataris must be forced to stop using slave labour to build stadiums.

But would America still have launched its investigation if it had won the bidding rights for 2022? Can a losing bidder be an impartial investigator?

And while the Western media have enormous power over those of us in Africa who get all our international news from them, I refuse to believe that the timing of the arrests was anything but a clear attempt to influence the election.

It’s amusing that the world was expected to blindly support the Jordanian prince who no one had heard of simply because the Western media, acting like the Ministry of Truth in Orwell’s 1984, said he was better than Blatter.

Under Blatter, Fifa has poured millions of dollars into the developing world to improve standards. This money should have been used better.

But there is a clear structural problem because the people who steal this money are Fifa delegates whom the Fifa president will naturally hesitate to crack down upon.

It is up to federations in Africa and elsewhere to raise their game and for delegates to choose better leaders than those we have in Kenya today.

Still, I heartily toast Blatter’s victory and the defeat of those who feel that the West must dominate every institution or, as one American editor put it, that bodies like Fifa should have a security council so that “the adults can take charge” and choose the leaders they please.

No, Fifa, unlike many important global institutions, is one place where the big animals are not more equal than others and that’s something worth celebrating.