Saudi Arabia offers to fund new Iraq football stadium

Iraqi and Saudi Arabia football fans cheer and wave national flags during the friendly match in Basra last week. (AP)

BAGHDAD: Saudi Arabia has offered to fund a new football stadium in Iraq, as FIFA prepares to decide whether to lift its ban on Iraq hosting competitive international matches.
The offer came in a telephone call between King Salman and Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi on Monday evening, the prime minister’s office said.
The stadium will be built in a sports city in Baghdad and will fit up to 100,000 spectators, Abadi's office added.
"A government commission has been formed to follow this issue," the head of Abadi's press office Haydar Hamada told AFP.
It follows an international friendly between the two countries in Iraq’s third city Basra on Feb. 28, their first on Iraqi soil in 40 years.
The king described the game, which Iraq won 4-1 in front of a capacity 60,000 crowd, as a “success,” Abadi’s office said.
It was watched by Asian Football Confederation head Salman bin Ibrahim Al-Khalifa who said “the time has come” to end the three-decade ban on Iraq hosting competitive international matches.
FIFA is due to decide on March 16.
The country has not played full internationals on home turf since its 1990 invasion of Kuwait.
The ban, covering all but domestic matches, stayed in place after the US-led invasion of 2003 toppled dictator Saddam Hussein.
It was briefly lifted in 2012, but a power outage during an Iraq-Jordan match in the Iraqi Kurdish capital Irbil led FIFA to promptly reinstate it.