Fifa chief Sepp Blatter on Tuesday raised the alarm about the spiralling Gaza crisis as he held talks with the head of the Palestinian Football Association.
“I am very much concerned with this situation in the region. We are heartbroken to learn that people from the football community have been killed. FIFA and I personally deplore this situation and any form of violence,” Blatter said.
“We are united in hoping for peace in this region and across the world,” the global game’s chief added.
PFA president Jibril Rajub met Blatter at FIFA’s headquarters on the sidelines of a visit to Switzerland to attend a session of the International Olympic Committee.
Rajub also heads the Palestinian Olympic Committee.
“I appreciate the commitment of the FIFA President to develop and invest in football in Palestine, despite the difficulties we face,” Rajub said in a statement.
“We believe football should remain a tool to build bridges between people. I am very saddened by the loss of Palestinian life in the current conflict but I am still optimistic that peace will prevail,” he said.
He said his dream was to see the Palestinians achieve an “independent, sovereign state alongside our neighbours, including the State of Israel, according to international legitimacy.”
In September last year, FIFA brokered a watershed face-to-face meeting between Rajub and his Israel Football Association opposite number Avi Luzon.


