Seven candidates will stand in Fifa's presidential election on 26
February.
The candidates are: Prince Ali bin al-Hussein, Musa Bility, Jerome
Champagne, Gianni Infantino, Michel Platini, Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim
al-Khalifa and Tokyo Sexwale.
Trinidadian ex-footballer David Nakhid was not included on the list, despite
saying he had submitted his candidacy.
The election is to find a successor to the suspended Sepp Blatter, who is
under criminal investigation.
The Swiss 79-year-old announced he would be stepping down in June, with
world football's governing body at the centre of a corruption scandal.
- Prince Ali bin al-Hussein, 39,
is president of the Jordan Football Association (Full
profile)
- Musa Bility, 48, is president
of the Liberian Football Association(Profile)
- Jerome Champagne, 57, is a
former Fifa executive (Profile)
- Gianni Infantino, 45, is Uefa's
general secretary (Profile)
- Michel Platini, 60, is Uefa
president and Fifa vice-president (Full profile)
- Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim
al-Khalifa, 49, is Asian Football Confederation president (Profile)
- Tokyo Sexwale, 62, is a South
African former government minister(Full profile)
Platini,
the head of European football's governing body, is also suspended, but Fifa's
electoral committee says it may allow him to stand if his ban ends before the
election date.
Fifa and
Swiss prosecutors are investigating reports that a £1.35m
payment was made in 2011 for work Platini did as Blatter's
adviser.
Both men
deny any wrongdoing and are appealing against their 90-day bans.
All
candidates had to obtain the written backing of five football associations
under Fifa electoral rules.
Source: BBC
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