FIFA has suspended the All Nepal Football Association (ANFA) effective immediately, citing undue government interference in the national body’s day-to-day operations. The move strips Nepal of its international standing, barring its national teams and clubs from all regional and global competitions.
The world governing body’s decision follows months of tension between the ANFA leadership and the National Sports Council (NSC). FIFA statutes mandate that member associations must manage their affairs independently, free from political pressure. When the NSC attempted to bypass the association’s elected leadership and appoint interim administrators, the Zurich-based headquarters issued a final warning. That warning expired Wednesday.
The suspension creates an immediate void for players. The men’s senior team, currently preparing for upcoming AFC qualifiers, now faces total isolation. Clubs hoping to participate in continental tournaments will see their spots revoked. For a program that has struggled for decades to find its footing on the international stage, the fallout is devastating.
“We have been clear about the requirements of our statutes,” a FIFA official said in a brief statement Thursday. “The autonomy of member associations is non-negotiable. We cannot recognize bodies that operate under the direct control of government-appointed officials.”
The ANFA leadership has remained largely silent since the announcement. Internal documents show the association had been struggling to balance FIFA’s compliance demands with increasing pressure from the Nepali Ministry of Youth and Sports to “clean up” alleged financial mismanagement.
Critics of the current ANFA administration argue the suspension is a necessary, albeit painful, reset. They claim the leadership has long ignored governance standards, leaving the government little choice but to intervene. Yet, the price of this intervention is the current ban, which leaves the sport’s development in the country at a complete standstill.
The suspension will only be lifted when the NSC restores the association’s autonomy and FIFA verifies that the elected body is back in control. Until then, Nepal’s presence on the global football map is officially erased.
