Bosnia-Herzegovina Suspended From International Matches
Bosnia-Herzegovina have been suspended from all international footballing events by UEFA and FIFA for refusing to come in line with regulations that state that a country’s football federation must have one single president. Bosnia’s FFBIH instead uses a rotational system in order to allow Muslims, Serbs, and Croatians an equal say in how the sport is run, a reflection of the country’s deep political divides following independence from Yugoslavia in the 1990s. The FFBIH was given until the end of March to comply with FIFA’s requirement to switch to a single president, but ignored the deadline and have now been stripped of membership rights in both FIFA and UEFA, who issued a joint statement on the matter:
It’s possible that FIFA intervenes directly, taking temporary control of the Bosnia football association and running it by emergency committee. There’s a precedent for such action, and it would allow the side to continue with their Euro 2012 qualification campaign. However, everyone’s aware that such an action would be little more than a band-aid, and if FIFA and UEFA are really going to insist that Bosnia have a single leader and they don’t want to, they’re not going to be able to play.
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