UEFA's general secretary Gianni Infantino is expected to enter the race for the FIFA presidency later today.

The members of UEFA's executive committee are expected to recommend that Infantino – Michel Platini's right-hand man for the last six years – be nominated for the presidency.

Platini has also submitted his candidacy for the election but is currently banned for 90 days pending a disciplinary hearing into a £1.3million payment signed off by outgoing president Sepp Blatter in 2011.

Sources close to UEFA have indicated that an emergency meeting of UEFA's executive committee – via teleconference – has been called where Infantino's candidacy will be discussed.

It comes after Asian football's leader Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa became the sixth candidate to submit his candidacy for the FIFA presidential election, according to the official Bahrain news agency.

Sheikh Salman, who is from Bahrain, is said to have submitted his nominations to FIFA last night despite opposition from human rights groups.

His entry into the election, even before the news of Infantino's involvement broke, threw the contest wide open. The Sheikh had previously backed UEFA president Michel Platini until his suspension, he commands widespread support in Asia and is a close ally of influential Olympic powerbroker Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah from Kuwait.

The other candidates announced so far are: South Africa's Tokyo Sexwale, a former anti-apartheid activist who was imprisoned on Robben Island with Nelson Mandela; Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan; David Nakhid, former Trinidad and Tobago player; and former FIFA deputy general secretary Jerome Champagne.

Sheikh Salman is a member of the Bahrain royal family and has attracted opposition from human rights organisations due to the regime's role in the suppression of the country's pro-democracy demonstrations in 2011.