FIFA handed down a sweeping suspension of the All Nepal Football Association (ANFA), effectively slamming the door shut on the Himalayan nation’s participation in international football and threatening to unravel years of hard-fought development in the sport.
The suspension, announced with immediate effect on Wednesday by FIFA Secretary General Mattias Grafström in a letter shared publicly by ANFA on Facebook, stems from what FIFA described as “flagrant violations of the FIFA Statutes,” specifically, what the global body characterized as “undue interference by a third party.”
That third party is Nepal’s own National Sports Council, the government authority charged with overseeing sports administration in the country, whose interventions in ANFA’s internal affairs proved to be the breaking point for football’s most powerful institution.
At the core of this dispute lies a fundamental tension that FIFA has repeatedly drawn a firm line on: the independence of national football associations from government control.
FIFA’s statutes are unambiguous on this point: a national association must be free to govern itself without interference from state bodies. When those boundaries are crossed, the consequences, as Nepal has now discovered, can be swift and severe.
The conflict between ANFA and the National Sports Council has been simmering for months, escalating in March 2026 when the council took the extraordinary step of suspending ANFA for three months precisely at a moment when the association was deep in preparations for an electoral process that had received the backing of both FIFA and the Asian Football Confederation (AFC).
That suspension was eventually lifted in May, but the damage to ANFA’s governance structures had already been done, and the alarm bells in Zurich were ringing.
The council compounded tensions further by issuing a series of directives demanding changes to ANFA’s internal statutes in accordance with Nepal’s sports development act, a move FIFA viewed as a direct overreach into the association’s autonomous governance.
The required elective congress, already delayed on multiple occasions, has still not been held. For FIFA, that delay driven by state-level interference was the final straw.
Beyond the bureaucratic and political wrangling, it is Nepal’s footballers, from the senior international players to the young men and women who dare to dream of representing their country, who now face the starkest consequences.
Nepal’s men’s national team, currently ranked 175th in FIFA’s world rankings, will be barred from all international competitions for the duration of the suspension. The women’s national team, ranked a comparatively stronger 88th in the world, a ranking that speaks to significant recent progress, faces the same fate.
“It impacts our players, barring them from opportunities and dampens dreams of aspiring players,” ANFA spokesman Suresh Shah told AFP, his words carrying the weight of a nation’s footballing ambitions suddenly placed in indefinite jeopardy.
The suspension does not end with match bans. ANFA will also lose access to FIFA’s development programs, training courses, and educational resources, the very scaffolding that smaller footballing nations rely upon to build the next generation of players and coaches.
For a country like Nepal, still striving to raise its footballing profile on the global stage, such resources are not a luxury; they are a lifeline.
“The suspension is an issue of grave concern; we are consulting with all stakeholders to lift the suspension, keeping Nepal’s football a priority,” Shah added, signaling that emergency consultations were already underway.
FIFA has not closed the door entirely. The governing body has laid out an explicit condition for the suspension to be lifted: the National Sports Council must revoke the decisions it made in March and allow ANFA to proceed unimpeded with its long-delayed electoral process.
In a statement that appeared to suggest the council did not fully anticipate the severity of FIFA’s response, Ram Charitra Mehta, a member secretary of the National Sports Council, struck a conciliatory tone. “The government never wanted this,” he said. “We are looking for alternative ways to address this crisis.”
Whether those alternative ways will be found swiftly and whether they will satisfy FIFA’s stringent requirements for ANFA’s independence remains the central question hanging over Nepali football.
History suggests FIFA moves slowly when it comes to lifting suspensions where it perceives government interference to be ongoing.
FIFA has previously suspended the football associations of countries, including Pakistan, Chad, and India, over similar issues of governmental interference, each case serving as a stark reminder that for FIFA, the principle of associational independence is non-negotiable, regardless of a nation’s size or standing.
The government and the sports council must now weigh the costs of their interventions measured not in statutes or legal arguments, but in the silenced boots of players who will not take the pitch for their nation and decide whether the power struggle was worth the price Nepal’s footballers are now being asked to pay.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
FIFA’s suspension of Nepal’s football association is a direct consequence of the government overstepping its boundaries in the independent governance of football.
The National Sports Council’s interference, suspending ANFA mid-election and issuing directives to rewrite its statutes, crossed a line FIFA will not tolerate from any government, anywhere in the world.
The real victims are Nepal’s players, whose careers and dreams are now on hold through no fault of their own. The fix is simple but politically uncomfortable: the government must back off, let ANFA run its own elections, and restore the independence FIFA demands. Until then, Nepali football pays the price for a power struggle it never asked for.

















