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| Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa, president of the Bahrain FA. ‘That a royal from such a country should be the momentum candidate in the election is a disgrace.’ | 
In this Thursday, April 30, 2015 file photo, Asian Football 
Confederation President Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa leaves the 
AFC Congress in Manama, Bahrain. The Confederation of African Football 
said Friday  it is backing Sheikh Salman of Bahrain in this month's FIFA
 presidential election. The decision also means CAF has turned its back 
on the only African candidate in the five-man field, South African 
businessman Tokyo Sexwale.  (AP Photo/Hasan Jamali, file)
Kigali - Bahrain's Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa gained a 
major boost in his bid to become the next Fifa president when he 
received endorsement from the Confederation of African Football (CAF) on
 Friday.
Salman and Swiss Gianni Infantino are now clear 
front-runners to win this month's presidential election at soccer's 
ruling body Fifa, which has been embroiled in a huge corruption scandal 
that has seen 41 people and entities indicted by the U.S. Department of 
Justice.
The governing body of football in Africa, which has 54 
full voting members, said Asian Football Confederation president Salman 
was its preferred candidate for the poll in Zurich on Feb. 26 that will 
determine who succeeds Swiss Sepp Blatter.
“CAF will give full 
support to Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa towards his candidacy 
for the Fifa presidency,” vice-president Suketu Patel told reporters 
before declining to answer questions.
The
 decision was a big blow for South African candidate Tokyo Sexwale who 
will remain in the race despite having come under pressure to withdraw.
Salman
 already has the backing of his own Asian confederation while Infantino,
 general secretary of UEFA, has the support of his European organisation
 along with the 10-member South American confederation CONMEBOL.
“I
 am deeply honoured to have earned the trust of many of our African 
friends at this crucial stage of the campaign effort,” Salman said in a 
statement.
“The two endorsements only mean there is a strong 
groundswell in favour of my candidacy. What they don't mean is that I 
can sit back and relax. This campaign will be decided on the day of the 
vote, not before.
“Naturally I am confident I now have a reasonably strong position to work from with such support,” added Salman.
The
 Fifa poll will be a secret ballot and the support of executive 
committees for candidates does not necessarily translate into a united 
block of votes.
Sexwale, who looked upset as he huddled with his 
advisers after Friday's meeting, will remain in the race despite being 
asked by CAF officials to stand down.
“They did ask 'can you stay 
back?' and my answer was I recommend that they should not consider me 
today...so that they should not have a difficult decision to make, and 
for the sake of unity,” the South African told reporters.
“But 
certainly in the race I remain. I still stand, I go to Zurich,” he 
added, noting that individual associations would make their own 
decisions.
The
 former anti-apartheid activist, who was imprisoned on Robben Island and
 was a close friend of the late South Africa President Nelson Mandela, 
said he did not feel betrayed by his fellow Africans.
“No. I was a
 man of war at one stage and I was in prison. I had been betrayed during
 war. I saw men die and I was betrayed like Mandela. This is all about 
football. Let's smile, it is a game,” he explained.
CAF listened 
to presentations from Salman, Sexwale, Infantino and Frenchman Jerome 
Champagne, the former Fifa deputy general secretary, who all travelled 
to Rwanda to attend the meeting.
Infantino said he expected the decision and vowed to win over the single federations.
“I
 am not surprised. It was in the air for a few days. It was not really a
 secret but it is not the executive committee that votes, it is the 
individual associations,” he added.
“I still have to visit many African countries in the coming few weeks and still have to see a few people.”
Champagne declined to comment on the CAF decision.
The fifth candidate, Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan, did not attend.
 
 
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