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The
Qatari team for the controversial winning bid to host the 2022 World Cup
offered large sums of money to senior African football figures for their
respective federations, claims former communications director Phaedra Almajid.
Almajid,
who gave evidence under condition of anonymity to the FIFA inquiry into the
corruption allegations surrounding the 2018 and 2022 bid races led by American
former federal prosecutor Michael Garcia, only to be controversially outed by
FIFA's ethics chief Hans-Joachim Eckert, told weekly football magazine France
Football she had been present when offers were made.
However,
she did not witness money changing hands.
She
said one meeting took place in the suite of a hotel in the Angolan capital
Luanda in January 2010 during the Confederation of African Football (CAF)
congress ahead of the continental football showpiece, the Africa Cup of Nations.
She
recounted to France Football that somebody in the room said "how delighted
they (the Qataris) were that a high ranking African football director was
present in the room and they wished to benefit his federation to the tune of a
million dollars (810,000 euros)."
"This
man (the African football director) replied without looking at the Qatari: 'Ah,
a million dollars... Why not a million-and-a-half dollars'," said Almajid,
who lost her job in 2010.
"And
the Qatari, he said he hoped he could count on his support. The fellow assured
him that was the case. And that was that," said Almajid.
She
said the same scene occurred with two other highly-placed African football
personalities — although she did not identify any of them.
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Almajid,
who said last month she will have to spend the rest of her life looking over
her shoulder and had been offered protection by the FBI after threats to her
and her children, was scathing over Eckert identifying her in his summary of
Garcia's report, in which he ruled out a revote for either the 2018 — to be
hosted by Russia — or the 2022 finals.
"Eckert
and FIFA were not loyal towards me," she told the magazine.
"(Eckert)
threw me to the lions in identifying me in the report."
Controversy
has stalked the 2022 World Cup ever since Qatar stunned their rivals in winning
the right to host the finals.
Even
the presentation of the final report by former federal prosecutor Garcia is
shrouded in doubt as the American said FIFA had misrepresented his findings.
Eckert's
summary of Garcia's 18-month investigation cleared Russia and Qatar to stage
the 2018 and 2022 World Cups respectively and ruled out a re-vote for the
tournaments despite widespread allegations of wrongdoing.
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But
in an extraordinary development, Garcia said he would appeal against the
findings in Eckert's summary as they contained "numerous materially
incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts and conclusions"
detailed in his report — which has not been made public.
FIFA
have also lodged a criminal complaint with Swiss authorities over
"possible misconduct" by individuals connected to the bids.
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