Former FIFA president
Sepp Blatter was asked by Switzerland's foreign ministry last year to help
persuade an African president to leave office.
Associated
Press report continues:
Blatter
offered Burundi president Pierre Nkurunziza an ambassador's role in world
soccer as the nation fell into violent turmoil, according to his new book,
which was launched on Thursday.
Blatter's
intervention was supported by the United States, he claims in "Sepp
Blatter: Mission and Passion Football," which was published in German.
After
Nkurunziza said last April he wanted an unconstitutional third presidential
term, a bloody military coup failed to remove him. Blatter said his offer to
Nkurunziza followed an approach by Yves Rossier, the state secretary of the
Swiss ministry.
"I
proposed to the president, who is a big football fan, in front of witnesses
that if it would be an advantage for his country and him, FIFA could deploy him
as an ambassador for football in Africa or in the whole world," Blatter is
quoted saying in an interview section of the 300-page book.
"Unfortunately,
that never happened," Blatter said of the offer, which was rejected.
Nkurunziza
then won a disputed election in July and continues to lead his troubled nation.
On
Thursday, the Swiss ministry confirmed there was contact between Blatter and
Rossier.
"The
intention was to contribute to a peaceful solution in order to prevent the
current crisis in Burundi," the ministry said in a statement, adding that
Switzerland "never asked president Nkurunziza not to run for the office of
president again."
Blatter's
picture-led book reflects on his 41 years at scandal-hit FIFA, which ended in
February. It includes photographs of Blatter with U.S. President Barack Obama,
Russian President Vladimir Putin and Pope Francis.
The
book had been scheduled for release before the Feb. 26 election to replace
Blatter as FIFA president, but was delayed.
Blatter
is awaiting an appeal hearing date at the Court of Arbitration for Sport to
challenge a six-year ban from soccer by FIFA. He was suspended for a financial
conflict of interest over a payment given to UEFA President Michel Platini.
Platini goes to CAS on April 29 to appeal against his six-year ban.
Blatter
is the subject of a Swiss criminal investigation over the payment and for
approving the sale of undervalued World Cup television rights for the
Caribbean. That deal benefited disgraced former FIFA vice president Jack
Warner, who appears in the book in the photograph of Blatter with Obama at the
White House in 2009.
The
FIFA election was won by former UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino, who
Blatter says in the book once applied for a job at an unspecified date in the
FIFA legal department.
"Without
success," Blatter wrote.
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