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Infantino’s ‘Peace Prize’ to Trump raises questions about FIFA’s neutrality 

Washington, DC – Players often face fines and bans from FIFA for displaying political messages, as the football governing body has long proclaimed a policy of political neutrality.

But on Friday, the association’s chief Gianni Infantino handed United States President Donald Trump the inaugural FIFA Peace Prize, further cementing his embrace of the Republican leader.

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Critics pointed out that the award came less than 24 hours after the Trump administration carried out another deadly air strike in the Caribbean.

Craig Mokhiber, a former United Nations official who has campaigned to suspend Israel from world football over its genocidal war in Gaza, called the award to Trump a “truly shameful development”.

Infantino has refused to take action against Israel, arguing that football “cannot solve geopolitical” issues.

“Not satisfied with two years of FIFA complicity in genocide in Palestine, Infantino and his cronies have now invented a new ‘peace prize’ in order to curry favour with Donald Trump,” Mokhiber told Al Jazeera.

He added that the award also aims to “obscure” Trump’s “disgraceful record” of support to Israel, his deadly strikes on vessels in the Caribbean Sea, and “gross violations of human rights” inside the US.

Infantino praises Trump

While presenting the prize on Friday, Infantino expressed support for Trump’s international deals, including the so-called Abraham Accords that established formal ties between Israel and several Arab states without resolving the question of Palestinian statehood.

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“This is what we want from a leader: a leader that cares about the people. We want to live in a safe world, in a safe environment. We want to unite, and that’s what we do here today, and that’s what we want to do at the World Cup,” Infantino said as he presented the award.

“Mr President, you definitely deserve the first FIFA Peace Prize for your action, for what you have obtained in your way, but you have obtained in an incredible way.”

Trump has openly campaigned for the Nobel Peace Prize but missed out on the award earlier this year.

He said the new FIFA recognition is one of the “great honours” he has received, and he repeated his claim that his presidency has saved millions of lives and ended eight wars.

The US president’s remarks were brief, but he still could not help but take a shot at the record of his Democratic predecessor, Joe Biden.

“The United States, one year ago, was not doing too well, and now I have to say we’re the hottest country anywhere in the world,” Trump said.

Infantino has previously warned against using football to stoke division. “There’s no more powerful tool than sport to unite the people,” he said in 2023. “Now we have to protect the autonomy of sport: the political neutrality of sport and to protect the values of sport.”

Two years later, critics point out that Infantino has created a prize to celebrate peace and unity, and then handed it to a president who called people from Somalia “garbage” just days prior.

“Giving Donald Trump a prize for peace is like giving Luis Suarez a prize for not biting people’s ears off,” football journalist Zach Lowy wrote on social media, referring to the Uruguayan forward who has been caught up in at least three biting incidents on the pitch throughout his career.

Infantino appears to have forged strong ties with Trump as the US prepares to co-host the World Cup with Mexico and Canada next year.

The FIFA president has been a regular guest at the White House, and in October, he attended a ceremony with Trump to formalise the Gaza truce in Egypt.

FIFA did not respond to Al Jazeera’s request for comment by the time of publication.

The Democratic Party was among the critics taking aim at the new FIFA award. “Trump couldn’t win a Nobel Peace Prize so FIFA made one up for him,” it said in a social media post.

But rights advocates levelled more serious criticism at the US president, invoking his rights record and foreign policy.

Trump’s record

While Trump has helped broker some peace deals between warring parties, most recently between Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, he has been an advocate for increased military spending across the Western world.

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Trump also ordered the bombing of Iran’s nuclear facilities in June, and he has continued to arm Israel despite its well-documented abuses against Palestinians.

In the Western Hemisphere, Trump’s administration has also carried out 22 air strikes against vessels that it says are carrying drugs, killing at least 86 people. Legal experts have widely condemned the attacks as unlawful acts of extrajudicial killing.

Moreover, Trump has been amassing military assets near Venezuela, raising speculation that the US may go to war with the country to topple left-wing President Nicolas Maduro.

At home, Trump has intensified an anti-immigration crackdown that has led to the detention and attempted deportation of non-citizens. Some advocates have been targeted for their criticism of Israel, an act of free speech protected under the First Amendment of the Constitution.

“US President Donald Trump was just awarded the newly created ‘FIFA Peace Prize’,” Human Rights Watch said on the social media platform X.

“But his administration’s appalling human rights record certainly does not display ‘exceptional actions for peace and unity’.”

For his part, Mokhiber, the former UN official, said the “vulgar” prize to Trump must be rescinded.

“FIFA rules do not allow play on a muddy pitch. They certainly shouldn’t play on a bloody pitch. But that’s precisely where Infantino is leading FIFA,” he said.

 

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Detectives were dispatched to Roy Lester Schneider Hospital on Nov. 27 after the victim reported that Janine Crispin struck him in the face during an argument inside his vehicle. He told officers Crispin ran from the scene on foot and that he later sought medical care because of his injuries, according to the police report.

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‘It’s About Circling the Wagons Now.’ Jury Hears Alleged Scheme, Cover-Up in Martinez, O’Neal Trial

Disclaimer: This story contains profanity. 
Ray Martinez likes steak.
A jury of Virgin Islanders knows this about the former V.I. police commissioner, on trial this week facing charges of honest services wire fraud, bribery, money laundering and obstruction of justice, because federal prosecutors on Thursday and Friday presented them with a bevy of recorded phone calls and text conversations between Martinez and convicted felon-turned government contractor-turned cooperating witness David Whitaker in which the two discussed:

Kitchen supplies Whitaker said he bought for Martinez

Tuition payments Whitaker said he wired to Martinez’s wife, V.I. Police Lieutenant Diana Martinez, for their kids’ private school tuition

Alleged bribes in exchange for a lucrative $1.4 million federally-funded surveillance camera contract with the V.I. Police Department

Fraudulently inflated invoices for work performed under that contract by Whitaker’s company, Mon Ethos Pro Support

Kickbacks prosecutors say Whitaker paid Martinez and former Management and Budget Director Jenifer O’Neal out of those inflated invoices ….

And steak. Martinez seasons and prepares his the day before cooking.
“That’s the magic of my steak, man,” he said during a January 2024 phone call with Whitaker in which the two also discussed O’Neal’s aversion to cellphones (“She doesn’t trust those things — and rightfully so”) and Diana Martinez working overtime (“for a few bucks more to pay bills at the end of the month”).
“That’s why it tastes the way it tastes,” Martinez said.
Steak played an outsize role in Martinez’s alleged criminality. Taking the stand Thursday, Whitaker told prosecutor Alex Dempsey, a trial attorney with the U.S. Justice Department’s Public Integrity Section, that he began buying Martinez kitchen equipment while working for VIPD without a contract in 2023 “so that he would stop working on his restaurant during work hours and pay my invoices.” The purchases included a $4,295 Kamado Joe ceramic grill, which had to be delivered by courier because of its size and which lived at Martinez’s house for at least a year before being moved to his St. Thomas restaurant, Don Felito’s Cookshop.
Whitaker and Martinez even racked up a $1,082 bill at the upscale Rare Steakhouse during one of three trips the pair took to Boston for Martinez’s medical appointments. During those trips, Whitaker testified, the pair stayed in a lavish two-bedroom suite at the luxury resort Encore Boston Harbor and spent thousands of dollars gambling and attending sporting events.
“Maybe I can get a consultation job at Rare,” Martinez mused in a November 2023 text message to Whitaker, along with a picture of steaks.
“Those look good!” Whitaker replied. “Jenifer is going to wish she had one.”
Later, Whitaker texted Martinez to thank him for dinner.
“My pleasure,” Martinez replied. “Without your help with the grill, those steaks wouldn’t have been possible.”
Jurors heard less about steak as the testimony and evidence shifted Friday morning to Whitaker’s relationship with O’Neal, who by January 2024 appeared focused on leaving her job at OMB to open a coffee shop in Yacht Haven Grande. Whitaker secretly recorded multiple phone calls and meetings with O’Neal in which they discussed business costs. During one April 2024 meeting between Whitaker, Martinez, and O’Neal, Martinez could be heard outlining kitchen equipment O’Neal needed, like “espresso tampers, frothing pitchers, barista tools.” Whitaker calculated that the renovation and construction would cost one hundred thousand dollars and that the furniture alone would take another thirty or fifty.
“Thirty is good,” O’Neal replied.
Privately, Martinez and Whitaker joked about O’Neal’s expensive preferences. In January 2024, Martinez said she had to take her “champagne taste and understand that she’s got a beer budget” after the two discussed her desire to furnish the coffee shop with pieces from Restoration Hardware, an upscale retailer. After Martinez noted that “she really enjoyed herself” when they met her for a day in Boston, Whitaker quipped: “Let’s not do that after we give her the money,” an apparent reference to her shopping habits.
During the January 2024 call, jurors also heard Martinez tell Whitaker that O’Neal wanted to be out of the job by May to avoid testifying as part of the fiscal year 2025 budget cycle.
Martinez also described O’Neal’s grievances with other members of Gov. Albert Bryan Jr.’s financial team, who were in the midst of sparring with the 35th Legislature about the government’s then-precarious financial state and mounting debts to vendors. Days later, lawmakers would be outraged to learn that of the $25 million they appropriated to cover retroactive wages in September 2023, only $2.5 million had been paid out before the December deadline. In February 2024, Whitaker asked O’Neal if she was still on track to leave the government by May.
“Yes,” she said. “I need to get out.”
Later in that conversation, the two questioned why Martinez didn’t let his wife, whom Whitaker said made more money, continue working at VIPD while Martinez focused on his restaurant.
“Every government employee have their own business — sitting in their government office working on their own business,” O’Neal said while outlining how Martinez could delegate his police work to his chiefs and deputies and saying that she didn’t have anyone like that on her own staff. O’Neal went on to complain about the financial team’s recent handling of lawmakers, prompting Whitaker to ask what Bryan was doing about Sen. Franklin Johnson.
“Man, fuck them,” O’Neal replied. “I don’t have time. I don’t have the energy.”
Of the defendants, Martinez alone faces two counts of obstructing justice. Jurors on Friday afternoon heard in detail how the alleged cover-up played out after federal investigators in June 2024 seized the phones of Martinez, O’Neal, and former Sports, Parks, and Recreation Commissioner Calvert White, who in July was convicted alongside businessman Benjamin Hendricks of committing wire fraud and bribery following their own dealings with Whitaker.
Martinez called Whitaker on June 13, 2024. Whitaker — who had been recording his conversations with the three former cabinet members under FBI supervision since September 2023 — questioned whether O’Neal would break ranks.
“And everything was going so well….” he said at one point during the call.
“No time to think about that, bro,” Martinez replied. “It’s about circling the wagons now.”

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