'Handshake for peace' initiative banner |
FIFA has expressed angry disappointment at the decision by
the Nobel Peace Centre to sever its links over the 'handshake for peace'
initiative, saying it had only learned of the move via the media and that the
action was against "fair play".
A FIFA statement said:
"We are disappointed to have learned from the media about the Nobel Peace
Centre's intent to terminate the cooperation with FIFA on the Handshake for
Peace initiative.
"FIFA is reluctant
to accept this unilateral approach on what is a joint initiative between the
football community and the Nobel Peace Centre (NPC). This action does not
embody the spirit of fair play especially as it obstructs the promotion of the key
values of peace-building and anti-discrimination."
Press Association report continues:
FIFA president Sepp
Blatter has long coveted a Nobel peace prize and had a telephone conversation
with the centre's chief executive Bente Erichsen on Tuesday morning.
The world governing body
said the handshake for peace would remain as part of the match protocol at the
Under-20 World Cup in New Zealand and Women's World Cup in Canada and at future
competitions.
Handshake for Peace at New Zealand 2015 |
Meanwhile Chuck Blazer was working undercover for the FBI for 18 months while still
a member of FIFA's executive committee, his plea agreement with US justice
authorities has revealed.
The 70-year-old struck a
deal to become an informant to avoid a potential jail term of up to 75 years
after pleading guilty to 10 charges, including bribery, money laundering and
tax evasion.
His plea agreement has
been made public and confirms he agreed to work undercover from December 2011.
The US justice department
last month announced charges against a total of 18 people for alleged
involvement in football-related corruption. Blazer and three others have
pleaded guilty, while seven FIFA officials arrested in Switzerland on May 27
are contesting extradition to the USA.
The 19-page plea
agreement says: "The defendant agrees to furnish to the office all
documents and other material that may be relevant to this investigation... and
to participate in undercover activities pursuant to the specific instructions
of law enforcement agents."
The agreement does not
detail what Blazer's sentence will be but says his co-operation with the
authorities can be taken into account.
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Blazer, a FIFA executive
committee member from 1997 to 2013, has admitted taking bribes to vote for
South Africa to host the 2010 World Cup, and named former FIFA vice-president
Jack Warner as also taking bribes.
Warner was president of
north and central American and Caribbean confederation CONCACAF and Blazer his
general secretary. Blazer admitted, among a series of revelations, that he and
Warner took bribes from Morocco for its 1998 World Cup bid and from South
Africa for 2010.
The plea agreement
disclosed Blazer, who is seriously ill with cancer, has already forfeited
1.95million US dollars as part of his illegal proceeds and will face making a
second payment when he is sentenced. He also admitted to accepting bribes in
relation to TV and marketing rights for the CONCACAF Gold Cup.
The New York Daily News
reported last year that Blazer had bugged meetings with executives at the
London 2012 Olympics with a wire device concealed in a key fob.
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