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    Infantino pledges new era after winning FIFA vote

    Gianni Infantino won FIFA's presidential election and vowed to lead the scandal-tainted body into a new era as he faced immediate calls to ensure genuine reform.

    Infantino pledges new era after winning FIFA vote
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    The 45-year-old UEFA general secretary scored a convincing victory in the battle to replace the disgraced Sepp Blatter, whose 18-year reign ended with FIFA mired in unprecedented crisis.

    Infantino, a Swiss-Italian, defeated Asian rival Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa in the second round of the vote of 207 members.

    "FIFA has gone through sad times, moments of crisis, but those times are over," he said, asserting that a 'new era' had begun for world's football's governing body, dogged by a vast set of corruption scandals.

    Blatter, who many hold responsible for the culture of patronage and graft that plagued FIFA, congratulated Infantino on his win.

    "With his experience, his capacities, his sense of strategy and diplomacy, he has all the qualities to continue my work," Blatter said in a statement.

    Infantino got 115 votes in the election's second round while Asian Football Confederation president Sheikh Salman, from Bahrain, got 88. They were just three votes apart in the first round.

    Five candidates started the day in contention.

    Prince Ali bin al Hussein of Jordan and former FIFA official Jerome Champagne saw their support fizzle after the first round, while South African tycoon Tokyo Sexwale withdrew before polling opened.

    Infantino said he would have no trouble uniting world football after an election which exposed divides between Europe, Infantino's power base, and voters in Asia and Africa.

    "Today it was an election but not a war," the new FIFA supremo told reporters. "In an election you win or lose and then life goes on."

    Sheikh Salman said he was looking forward to working with his campaign rival, and called for 'unity' while stressing that FIFA needed to be more 'inclusive and reflect the diversity of world football'.

    Infantino's election was hailed by world figures such as Russia's President Vladimir Putin and federation chiefs.

    Putin, whose country will host the 2018 World Cup, said Infantino comes into the post with 'high authority'.

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