The draw for the Under-20 FIFA World Cup, scheduled to take place in Indonesia next week, will be postponed after Bali’s governor refused to host the Israeli team.
The Indonesian Football Association (PSSI) said the draw that was to be held on Friday had been canceled.
FIFA was still conducting checks on tournament readiness.
The 24-team tournament is scheduled to be held from May 20 to June 11 across six cities and Israel was set to make their debut in the competition.
A report earlier this month said that Bali’s governor, Wayan Koster, had written to the Ministry of Youth and Sports imploring them to “adopt a policy forbidding the Israeli team from competing in Bali” due to the conflict with Palestine.
The letter was also sent to the PSSI.
“Previously, the Bali governor rejected the presence of the Israeli national team in the FIFA U-20 World Cup event. This can be a reason for FIFA to cancel the U-20 World Cup draw.
“Because, for FIFA, the governor’s refusal is the same as canceling the organizing guarantee that has been issued by the Bali provincial government,” the PSSI said in a statement.
Earlier this month, protesters marched in the capital of Jakarta waving Indonesian and Palestinian flags while demanding that Israel should not be allowed to participate.
Indonesia’s population is predominantly Muslim. Most Indonesian Muslims practice a moderate version of Islam, but recent years have seen a rise in religious conservatism that has crept into sports.
Over the past year, Israeli forces have made thousands of arrests in the West Bank and killed more than 200 Palestinians, including fighters and civilians.
Meanwhile, more than 40 Israelis and three Ukrainians have died in Palestinian attacks.
If Indonesia loses hosting rights as a result, PSSI Executive Committee member Arya Sinulingga said he was worried about how FIFA sanctions could “isolate Indonesian football from the world”.
Indonesia automatically qualified for the Under-20 World Cup as hosts but the last time they played in the tournament was in 1979.
Indonesia was also suspended by FIFA for nearly a year for government interference, with the global soccer body lifting the suspension in May 2016.
But at the time, the suspension had denied Indonesian teams the chance to qualify for upcoming major tournaments.
Sinulingga said the PSSI hoped for a solution where politics could be separated from sport, with its chairman Erick Thohir set to coordinate with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Youth and Sports.
“The chairman will also report to Mr. President at the first opportunity to find a solution to all this, both diplomacy and foreign policy to save Indonesian football that we love,” Sinulingga added.
The PSSI said losing hosting rights would harm Indonesian football teams’ chances of taking part in other FIFA tournaments in the future while the economic losses would amount to “trillions of rupiah”.
Indonesia is also trying to rebuild its reputation after a deadly stampede last year led to the deaths of 135 spectators at a stadium in East Java in October.
Many were crushed as they fled for exits after police fired tear gas into the crowd.