Argentina's government said
Thursday it paid $22 million dollars to the country's Football
Association to avert a players' strike over unpaid wages that threatened
to disrupt the new season.
The Argentina
Footballers' Union (AFA) had threatened to strike on the first day of
the season Friday in a dispute over redistribution of broadcasting
revenues.
It said some players had not been paid
for four months because the state had failed to redistribute
broadcasting revenues to their clubs.
In a
decision published in the official journal, the government approved the
payment of 350 million pesos
($22 million) to the AFA, which will pass
it on to clubs.
A management crisis in the AFA has disrupted Argentine domestic football and the national team.
It has sparked criticism of the AFA by the likes of Argentina's World Cup legend Diego Maradona.
Last week the AFA ended a contract that gave the state broadcasting rights to top matches.
The association is scheduled to elect a new president next month.
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