Sepp
Blatter has been in charge of FIFA since 1998 but his days in football appear
to be numbered; The Septuagenarian Swiss insists he is innocent but his 17-year
reign appears to drawing to a close
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Sepp Blatter and Michel
Platini face being thrown out of football for years on the basis of new secret
evidence of financial wrongdoing passed to FIFA’s ethics committee in the past
few days, a senior source inside the world governing body has told The Mail on
Sunday. If
it transpires to be as damning as insiders believe, Blatter’s 17-year reign as
president will be over for good, while Platini’s future in football politics
will be in shreds.
Michel
Platini lit up the Eighties with his displays for Juventus and France, but his
legacy is now tarnished
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‘Emotions
are high at present but this is far more serious than anyone can imagine,’ said
a high-ranking source close to the ethics committee. ‘The reality is that this
is beyond clumsiness, it possibly verges on a criminal offence.’
Blatter
and Platini have been suspended for 90 days while the ethics committee
investigates an irregular ‘disloyal’ payment of £1.3million to Platini,
sanctioned by Blatter, in 2011.
Daily Mail UK report continues:
Both
men insist they are innocent. Platini is seeking to have his suspension
overturned via an appeal by the French FA to the Court of Arbitration for Sport
so he can formally declare as a FIFA presidential candidate to succeed Blatter
before the deadline of October 26.
It
remains uncertain, however, whether that February election will go ahead.
With
the leaders of FIFA and UEFA suspended, both beleaguered organizations have
called emergency sessions of their top brass within the next 10 days to try to
negotiate a path through the mayhem.
Michel
D’Hooghe, the veteran Belgian who sits on both the FIFA and UEFA executive
committees, summed up the mess.
‘I
have never known a situation like this,’ he told The Mail on Sunday. ‘We have a
president and a general secretary [Jerome Valcke] suspended and we have to make
FIFA more transparent so that what has happened in the past cannot be repeated.
‘I
have no idea why the election should be postponed but there may be arguments on
both sides. The most important thing is the future of FIFA.’
In
a separate development, the MoS can reveal Blatter, while FIFA president,
secretly warned fellow executive Jack Warner about involvement in corrupt or
inappropriate activity multiple times but never reported it to anyone else.
Secret
internal FIFA documents obtained by the MoS show Blatter knew of alleged
corruption involving Warner and kept it to himself.
This
is not the first time Blatter has been the subject of an ethics committee
investigation.
In
2011, he was accused of knowing Warner was involved in a bribery racket but
failing to tell anyone about it.
It
was later established that Warner had facilitated a meeting in Trinidad where
Caribbean football officials attended a speech by FIFA presidential candidate
Mohamed Bin Hammam and many of them subsequently pocketed ‘gifts’ of US$40,000 in
cash.
Warner
claimed Blatter knew money was going to change hands. Chuck Blazer, another
former FIFA executive committee member, corroborated this version of events.
Blatter denied it. But in documents seen by the MoS, which detail what Blatter
told an ethics committee hearing, the 79-year-old admits Warner notified him of
what was about to happen.
FIFA
is in tatters following allegations against its president and several disgraced
senior figures
|
In
a written statement to the FIFA ethics committee, Blatter said: ‘Warner told me
that at the planned special CFU Congress, the CFU members would receive money
from Mohamed Bin Hammam.’
In
a short, verbal hearing with the ethics committee in 2011, in which Blatter was
treated deferentially, he claimed he was innocent of failing to act because he
saw no evidence — until later — that bribes were actually going to be paid.
Blatter
said to the ethics committee that he told Warner ‘he should refrain’ from organizing any meeting where bribes were paid.
Blatter’s
defence was based on this claim: that he’d told Warner not to get involved in
irregular meetings.
Blatter,
referring to previous warnings he had given Warner, told the ethics committee:
‘It was not the first time I told him that.’
Blatter
told the ethics committee he himself was innocent, and that he would tell the
upcoming FIFA congress he had a ‘zero tolerance’ approach to wrongdoing. ‘This
is since two months, zero tolerance,’ he said.
The
ethics committee, chaired by Petrus Damaseb, a FIFA official from Namibia,
found Blatter innocent. At the end of his hearing, Damaseb asked Blatter: ‘Are
you happy with everything that has transpired? Have we treated you fairly, are
you unhappy with the way in which anything has transpired here this afternoon,
sir?’
Blatter
replied: ‘Definitely, chairman. You and the committee members, you treated me
fairly. This is exactly what we want. It is respect; it is discipline and fair
play. Thank you so much.’ Warner was subsequently allowed to resign in June
2011 from FIFA and all ethics proceedings against him were dropped. FIFA
released a warmly worded statement thanking for him for his contribution to
football and said ‘the presumption of innocence is maintained’ over any
allegations against him.
When
Bin Hammam later challenged his own ban at the Court of Arbitration for Sport
(CAS), Blatter was called to give evidence.
In
CAS paperwork, it is noted Blatter was uncooperative on some matters: ‘Mr Blatter
declined to answer questions concerning the circumstances of Mr Warner’s
resignation and the termination of disciplinary proceedings against him, as
well as the relationship between these two events.’
The
American authorities are in the process of trying to extradite Warner from
Trinidad to the USA to face multiple corruption charges.
As
and when that happens, it is possible Warner could tell all he knows about
long-term corruption at FIFA, as indeed both his sons and Blazer have already
done.
One crucial detail is what
Blatter knew, if anything, about a US$10m bribe paid in relation to the hosting
of the 2010 World Cup in South Africa.
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