Fifa presidential election: Everything you need to know
All you need to know for the Fifa election including the candidates and how the vote will work.
On Friday, the Fifa Congress will vote in Zurich to elect a new president of football's world governing body.
Here is our guide to everything you need to know about the election, including who the candidates are and how the voting will work.
Football's world governing body needs a new president to replace Sepp Blatter.
Last year the 79-year-old Swiss was banned from football for eight years.
It followed an investigation into a £1.3m "disloyal payment" made to Michel Platini by Blatter in 2011.
There are five candidates vying to become the next Fifa president.
Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein
Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan has vowed to root out corruption at football's governing body. He is the son of the late King Hussein of Jordan, and said to be a direct descendant of the prophet Mohammad. Prince Ali lost to Blatter by 130 votes to 73 in May.
Gianni Infantino
Infantino is a Swiss lawyer and was Platini's right-hand man as Uefa secretary general since 2009. His policies include increasing the number of countries involved in the World Cup.
Tokyo Sexwale
Tokyo Sexwale is a South African anti-apartheid activist who spent time imprisoned on Robben Island with Nelson Mandela. He is the head of Fifa's committee on Israel and Palestine. Sexwale made a fortune through his business interests in oil and diamonds.
Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa
Sheikh Salman is the president of the Asian football confederation. The Sheikh commands plenty of influence, especially in Asia and the Middle East. But he faces opposition from human rights groups about the crackdown on pro-democracy campaigners in Bahrain by the ruling Al Khalifa family.
Jerome Champagne
Former French diplomat Jerome Champagne worked under Blatter as Fifa deputy general secretary until 2010. Champagne was unable to secure backing from five associations for the May election but has managed to do so for this campaign. His manifesto includes radical ideas such as cutting European places at World Cups.
A secret ballot will take place on Friday afternoon involving 207 of the 209 Fifa Congress members - Kuwait and Indonesia are currently suspended.
In the first round, a candidate can win by getting more than two-thirds of the votes.
If no candidate is successful, a second ballot is held in which a new president can be elected by obtaining half of the votes cast.
Should this still not produce a winner, if there are more than two candidates then the one with the least votes in the second ballot drops out.
Further ballots will then be held until a candidate gets 50% of the vote, with the lowest ranking candidate dropping out after each round until someone is elected.
The frontrunners in the race are Sheikh Salman and Gianni Infantino, with bookmakers offering favourable odds on either of them winning.
Prince Ali is an outside bet, while Jerome Champagne and Tokyo Sexwale are being given virtually no chance.