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Bahraini sheikh wants one FIFA candidate

Manama - A Bahraini sheikh is going for simplicity and fan-appeal with headline pledges to transform a discredited FIFA: Relinquish much of the power Sepp Blatter built up over 17 years at FIFA and take no salary.

Sheikh Salman bin Ibrahim Al Khalifa was a late, seemingly reluctant candidate to lead FIFA's recovery from a corruption crisis that is likely to see fresh revelations of wrongdoing emerging long after election day in February.

"I don't want too much power with the president - the power has to be shared," Sheikh Salman said in an interview.

"I believe in doing things in a different way, not being centralized where the president has to do every detail in running the business."

That means taking no money for being the face of FIFA.

"I don't want to be an executive president," the sheikh said. "And if I'm not an executive president I don't see how I do deserve to be paid."

Rather than a bitter election fight until February 26, the sheikh hopes there is a smooth succession, with the five candidates currently vying to run football whittled down before election day.

"I'd like to see most of the continents agreeing on a single candidate but we have to work for this in the next few weeks," the sheikh said during an hour-long interview in the Bahraini capital Manama.

Had it not been for Michel Platini injudiciously claiming 2 million Swiss francs ($2 million) from FIFA four years ago, this Manchester United-supporting member of Bahrain's royal family would not now be a front-runner to become the first Arab leader of FIFA.

Having been among Platini's early campaign champions, Sheikh Salman entered the race once it became clear the UEFA president's suspension over that 2011 payment made the election outcome far more uncertain. The Asian Football Confederation president would not have wanted Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan to have a clear path to the presidency.

The decision to stand was effectively a toss-up between Sheikh Salman and fellow FIFA executive committee member Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, the Kuwaiti who built his powerbase through the Olympic movement.

"We felt after Michel's ban we felt one of us has to go," Sheikh Salman said. "And I think that he looks at it as (a job for) the president of a confederation ... it wasn't a difficult choice between us."

Platini is out of contention while awaiting the full verdict from FIFA's ethics judge which could result in a long ban for the former France captain.

"I think damage has been done," Sheikh Salman said. "But he has the right as well to defend himself. We cannot judge."

The sheikh has already faced the judgment of many. With little name recognition profile among football fans outside the Asian region he has led for barely two years, his international spotlight usually comes when challenged on human rights abuse allegations he denounced as lies.

Despite complaints against his candidacy from rights groups, the sheikh was last week approved as a candidate by FIFA's election watchdog alongside four other men: Prince Ali, UEFA General Secretary Gianni Infantino, former FIFA official Jerome Champagne and apartheid-era former Robben Island prisoner Tokyo Sexwale.

How many names are on the ballot paper in Zurich in February could depend on whether Platini defies expectations and is cleared before election day.

"If he comes back and he still wants to run, I think we would have to sit together ... and assess the situation," Sheikh Salman said.

"I am sure there will be an agreement. At the end of the day we all need to support each other ... (and) come with a compromise to hopefully have a good solution for everybody."

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