Former Fifa presidential candidate Prince Ali takes football charity global

Jordanian outlines plans for the Association Football Development Programme Global to fund projects

Syrian refugee children play on the main market street in the Al-Zaatari refugee camp in the Jordanian city of Mafraq, near the border with Syria, July 30, 2018. Picture taken July 30, 2018. REUTERS/Muhammad Hamed
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Former Fifa presidential candidate Prince Ali bin Al Hussein is taking his football charity project worldwide as he aims to build on its work with Syrian refugees in Jordan.

On Tuesday, Prince Ali outlined plans for the Association Football Development Programme Global to fund projects, donate equipment and provide expert management at a launch at Premier League side Arsenal’s home stadium in London.

The NGO’s partners include War Child UK, which helps former child soldiers in Africa, the Uefa Foundation For Children, streetfootballworld and the Spanish league.

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Prince Ali's original focus was in Asia, with funding from Fifa as a member of its executive committee from 2011-15. He decided to go global after meeting football officials on his Fifa election campaigns in 2015 and 2016.

"I realised you could really broaden the work to the entire world where there are so many similar challenges," Prince Ali told The Associated Press.

Central Africa is a target with the War Child Football Club project aiming to kick off in seven countries with help from AFDP Global.

Prince Ali said he is open to working with professional clubs who can apply to partner on projects.

“We are not going to limit ourselves to anything,” he said. “There is absolutely no politics involved. And it’s not limited to any place – it could be a project with inner-city kids in the UK”

The Zaatari refugee camp of 80,000 people displaced from Syria has been the programme’s core work with 5,000 children now playing the sport, including a football pitch for girls opened in recent weeks.

“It’s an unfortunate situation but I’m very proud of what it has become,” said Prince Ali, who has no immediate plans to work with Fifa.

“We want to work independently but if we are asked to, then sure,” he said. “Any work we do has to be really physically tangible on the ground.”

Uefa has supported the Zaatari camp, and its president, Aleksander Ceferin, praised AFDP for “giving these children opportunities that they otherwise would not have had.”

After losing Fifa elections first against Sepp Blatter and then in a five-candidate contest won by Gianni Infantino, Prince Ali does not expect to try a third time.

“My focus is on this project,” said the Jordan Football Association president, who also heads the West Asian group of Fifa member federations.