'Another example of football not doing the talking'published at 09:14 BST
USA 1-4 Belgium
Dale Johnson
Football issues correspondent
Image source, Getty ImagesFifa's statutes are clear about political interference. It is not permitted.
Countries are regularly suspended from international football because of government involvement in national football associations.
Pakistan, for instance, have been suspended three times in the space of eight years.
When it comes to Infantino and Trump, are the rules different?
The World Cup draw, during which Trump was bestowed with the inaugural Fifa Peace Prize, felt like the culmination of two years of Infantino fostering a close relationship with the US president.
"You can always count, Mr President, on my support, on the support of the entire football community to help you make peace and make the world prosper all over the world," Infantino told Trump when presenting the award.
Human rights campaign group FairSquare complained to Fifa's ethics committee in December that Infantino broke the governing body's rules on political neutrality in creating the prize.
With no response, last month 50 MEPs wrote a new letter to the ethics committee, external, external demanding action. Like many situations with Fifa, there has been no response.
Fast-forward to the tournament, and Trump has not been to a single World Cup match. But here he was, taking ownership of Balogun's situation. It was another example of football not doing the talking.
We had seen it with Somali referee Omar Artan. Artan was denied access to the US by immigration officials, with Infantino accused of losing control of his own World Cup. Yet when he faced questions from the media last month - for the first time in over three years - his response was, at best, glib.
"Just, you know, chill, relax," Infantino said of Artan's plight.
Controversy has always felt just around the corner. That something was bubbling under the surface.
And through it all, rarely have there been answers or transparency.
Take Friday's five hours of limbo, when Fifa first decided to change the kick-off time of England's last-16 tie against Mexico, then did a U-turn, while pretending it didn't happen.
The Balogun situation is out of the same playbook.
A decision communicated without any reasoning. Football is just told it is happening, and it must accept it.



















