Prince Ali officially throws hat in ring for FIFA presidency, again

Ali previously tried to unseat incumbent president Sepp Blatter in May's election.

Jordan's Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein has officially submitted his candidacy for the presidency of FIFA.

The deadline for contenders to officially submit their candidacy is Oct. 26.

Ali previously tried to unseat incumbent president Sepp Blatter in May's election.

The election took place just as a massive scandal broke leading to the indictment of nine FIFA officials and five FIFA affiliated sports officials in the United States. The scandal has since expanded, leading to Blatter's suspension and a criminal investigation into his actions as president.

Despite the scandal, Blatter won 133 votes compared to Ali's 73.

He later announced that he would resign do to the ongoing scandal, announcing early elections. At the time, Ali criticized Blatter for trying to push through reforms before leaving office.

“We need a clear process, clear timelines, and a very clear remit. And all this should belong to the new president,” Ali said, according to  Reuters.

“It is the role of the new president to put in place the necessary systems to implement the changes that FIFA so desperately needs, not a Task Force trying to rush this through.”

The new election will take place on Feb 26 and Ali is hopeful for real reform.

"I am confident that FIFA can emerge from this difficult period with its reputation restored and become an organisation that is once again viewed with respect," he said, according to Sky Sports.

We'll see if the next president, whoever it is, can bring the real reforms the prince is hoping for.

Egypt to open museum at Cairo International Airport

The "Airport Museum" will act as a brief introductory exhibition of Egyptian history and civilization for travelers.

A new Egyptian museum will be inaugurated at the Cairo International Airport at the end of October, according an Egyptian Antiquities Ministry's statement .

The museum, which will be opened in the transit hall of the airport's third terminal, will house a collection that spans multiple historical eras in Egypt's history, and thus will represent the different stages of Egyptian civilization.

The museum will encompass 38 artifacts that were selected from three of the greatest museums in Egypt: the Egyptian Museum, the Coptic Museum and the Museum of Islamic Art, according to the head of the Museums Sector, Ilham Salah.

The museum's collection will also include a number of unique pieces such as a schist palette that dates back to ancient Egypt's pre-dynastic period and a statue of an ancient Egyptian writer that dates back to the fifth dynasty.

In addition, the collection also includes a group of statues that date back to the Greek and Roman periods, iconic Coptic pieces that date back to the 18th century and a group of coins, Qurans and embellished plates that date back to Egypt's different Islamic eras.

The "Airport Museum" will therefore act as a brief introductory exhibition of Egyptian history and civilization for incoming tourists, business travelers and those transiting through the airport.

The airport project has come as a part of the latest string of Egyptian museums inaugurated to promote tourism, such as the "Age of the Pyramids' Builders" exhibition the ministry is inaugurating in Tokoyo on Thursday.

The exhibition will then go on to display 120 Old Kingdom artifacts in eight main Japanese cities for the duration of 25 months. Antiquities minister Mamdouh El-Damaty said that the exhibition is expected to bring in 2 million USD.