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BBC Newsline's Julie McCullough reports on the sacking of IFA Chief Executive Howard Wells (right) with President Raymond Kennedy.
Irish Football Association chief executive Howard Wells has been sacked.
A brief statement from the Irish FA said that it had "terminated" the chief executive's employment in the "best interests of the association".
It was revealed in August that the Irish FA chief had taken a grievance case against his employer.
Wells claimed he had been treated unfairly because he was English and there was also a dispute over an unpaid �30,000 bonus payment.
Mr Wells, named two individuals in his complaint, one of them IFA president Raymond Kennedy, who has said that he will be acting as interim chief executive.
When contacted after Monday's IFA announcement, Wells said that "the matter is in the hands of my legal advisors and that is all I'm saying".
Wells, who was appointed by the IFA in November 2004, is understood to have earned in the region of �100,000 per annum.
Monday's two-sentence Irish FA statement did not actually include Wells' name.
Irish FA president Kennedy later told the BBC that he was reluctant to comment further on the issue "in case there are further implications".
He hadn't very much to say at all
IFA president Raymond Kennedy on Howard Wells' reaction to his dismissal
"There has been an ongoing breakdown in the relationship between the Irish FA and the chief executive," said Kennedy.
Kennedy added that no financial settlement had been reached with the sacked chief executive.
"Absolutely not. That's why I've no comment to make about anything that would prejudice anything in that manner."
When asked about Wells' reaction to his dismissal, Kennedy replied:"He hadn't very much to say at all. There was no debating."
Kennedy added that an IFA board meeting is planned for this Thursday.
Wells became the IFA's first chief executive in November 2004 - he had held similar posts at Watford and Ipswich.
An experienced sports administrator, he was the inaugural chairman of UK Sport and also chaired the Central Council of Physical Recreation.
The Belfast-based position was created as part of the reorganisation of Northern Ireland football under the government's soccer strategy.
Wells saw his brief as modernising the IFA and ensuring that the sport was run on a sounder financial footing but his methods saw him having spats with previous association president Jim Boyce and latterly Raymond Kennedy.
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