FIFA
welcomed three female members on to its Executive
Committee following a historic election at the FIFA Congress
in Mauritius. Lydia
Nsekera earns her place on the committee after receiving the most votes (95) in
the first-ever election for a female candidate and is elected for four years,
while Moya Dodd (70 votes) and Sonia Bien-Aime (38 votes), will also join
FIFA’s top table as co-opted members, for one year.
This
follows a proposal made by the FIFA President with support from the existing
members of the FIFA Executive
Committee to have more females in decision-making positions within
football. The landmark election marks an important step in FIFA’s two-year
reform process.
Burundi
Football Association President Lydia Nsekera made history last year in Budapest
at the 62nd FIFA Congress
when she was co-opted onto the FIFA Executive
Committee as the committee’s first-ever female member on an interim
one-year basis.
The 63rd FIFA Congress
in Mauritius is another milestone in the history of women’s representation in
the football family as the 209 members showed overwhelming approval (99 per
cent) for the FIFA Statutes 2013, in particular the article 24 al.3 proposing
”one candidate for the office of the female member of the Executive
Committee”.
Nsekera is
the 25th member of the FIFA Executive
Committee composed of 24 members until today. Her mandate as
approved by the Congress will be of four years beginning immediately. In case
she permanently ceases to perform her official function, the Executive
Committee may designate another female member until the next
Congress as stipulated in the newly approved FIFA Statutes.
Nsekera,
who was the first woman to be co-opted at last year's 62nd FIFA Congress, vowed
that she will "inspire women to believe they can lead, I will push them to
let their girls play football because it is a school of life, and I will
support women in the Member Associations."
As
proposed by the FIFA Executive
Committee on 28 May, Nsekera will be accompanied by the two other
candidates as co-opted members: Bien-Aime (CONCACAF) and Dodd (AFC), raising
the number of females seating onto the Executive
Committee to three.
The two
co-opted members, who were originally nominated by their respective
confederations as candidates for the female position on the Executive
Committee, are highly experienced.
Dodd was a
distinguished national team player who spent nine years representing Australia
and became the first female member of the Football Federation Australia's executive
committee. She has also risen through the ranks of the Asian Football
Confederation, an organisation in which she was recently re-elected
vice-president. Dodd acknowledged before the vote that the Congress was part of
a landmark occasion. “It’s a historic day for football and a great day for
women," she said. "I’d like to contribute to the best governance
of the game, and to fight against match manipulation and discrimination.
Football is the sport everybody loves; no-one should be excluded. And we should
not only protect the game, but also fight against discrimination outside of
football.”
Bien-Aime,
General Secretary at the Turks & Caicos Islands Football Association
(TCIFA), said before the vote took place that she believed that FIFA’s decision
to include a woman on its Executive
Committee represented “a great move, a very welcome move".
She added: "I welcome the opportunity to be elected; to be a voice
giving opinion, a voice willing to listen and talk, a voice that just happens
to be the voice of a woman.”
FIFA.
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