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US lawyer Michael Garcia
has resigned as FIFA's independent ethics investigator after losing his appeal
challenging the findings to clear Russia and Qatar to host the 2018 and 2022
World Cups.
Press Association reports Garcia has issued a
statement criticizing FIFA's "lack of leadership", saying he cannot
change the culture of the world governing body.
He said:
"Accordingly, effective today, December 17, 2014, I am resigning as
independent chairman of the investigatory chamber of the FIFA ethics
committee."
Garcia, who discovered on
Tuesday that he had lost his appeal against the findings by ethics judge
Hans-Joachim Eckert, said it would have been "impractical" to take
the appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
His statement adds:
"The appeal committee also overlooked the Eckert decision's self-described
'findings', including one stating that "the evaluation of the 2018/2022
FIFA World Cups bidding process is closed for the FIFA ethics committee.
"FIFA president
[Sepp] Blatter recently reaffirmed that 'finding' during an interview published
by FIFA, stating: 'Furthermore, there is no change to Judge Eckert's statement
that the investigation into the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 FIFA
World Cups is concluded.'
"I disagree with the
appeal committee's decision. It now appears that, at least for the foreseeable
future, the Eckert decision will stand as the final word on the 2018/2022 FIFA
World Cup bidding process."
Garcia's investigation
into the bidding had seen him deliver a 430-page report to Eckert, and FIFA's
executive committee meeting in Marrakesh on Thursday and Friday are due to vote
on whether that should be published but with the names redacted.
Garcia himself called for
his report to be published back in September - but has now revealed he found
himself reported to FIFA's disciplinary committee for doing so, though no
action was taken.
The American attorney has
raised questions over the findings by Eckert, a German judge.
He said: "The issues
raised by Mr Eckert's selection and omission of material from the report, and
his additional comments, went far beyond the initial transparency concerns.”
"And while the
November 13, 2014, Eckert decision made me lose confidence in the independence
of the adjudicatory chamber, it is the lack of leadership on these issues
within FIFA that leads me to conclude that my role in this process is at an
end."
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