Brazil to review suspicious contracts

The Brazilian Football Confederation will review any contracts under suspicion in charges filed by US prosecutors, the group's president said.

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Rio de Janeiro - The Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF) will review any contracts under suspicion in charges filed by United States prosecutors, the group's president said on Friday and ruled out resigning.

Marco Polo Del Nero, who took over from jailed former CBF chief Jose Maria Marin last year, said he was saddened by the corruption charges against his longtime friend and former boss, but he denied any involvement in bribery schemes laid out in indictments filed in New York on Wednesday.

“I won't resign because I had nothing to do with it,” Del Nero told a press conference at CBF headquarters in Rio de Janeiro. “I knew nothing.”

Del Nero did not specify which contracts would be reviewed. The US Federal Bureau of Investigation found evidence of millions of dollars in bribes paid for a 1996 sponsorship deal between Brazil's national team and a US sportswear company, with details matching a deal with Nike Inc.

Nike has said it is cooperating with the investigation and that the indictment does not accuse the company of crimes.

Del Nero left a gathering of world soccer organization Fifa in Zurich, Switzerland shortly after senior officials, including Marin, were arrested and face extradition to the United States. The Fédération Internationale de Football Association (Fifa) annual congress re-elected Swiss Sepp Blatter, 79, to a fifth term on Friday despite pressure on him to resign.

Del Nero said he had rushed back to Brazil in order to give all necessary explanations to authorities, including federal police who began their own investigation of corruption allegations over decades at the highest levels of Brazilian soccer.

Brazil's constitution forbids extradition of Brazilians.

Del Nero fits the description of one of two unidentified co-conspirators in the indictment, both of whom are described as “high-ranking officials” at CBF, Fifa and a South American soccer association.

Del Nero said he was not one of the unidentified co-conspirators whom the indictment said took bribes in connection with contracts for marketing and broadcast rights.

CBF handed over contracts signed under Marin and his predecessors to federal prosecutors, Del Nero said, in order to show a willingness to collaborate.

Reuters



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Blatter wins Fifa election

Sepp Blatter has won Fifa's presidential election, establishing himself as a politician who can weather any storm.

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Zurich - A new election triumph in the midst of a corruption scandal established Fifa president Sepp Blatter as the politician who can come through any storm.

Unapologetically divisive, Blatter has had to deal with scandal virtually since his first day in office.

And Blatter knows that he still has a long way to go to reach the aim he outlined Friday of getting Fifa in a safe port “where the boats will stop rocking.”

“He sees it all like a marathon. And he is one of the most determined men you will meet,” said one Fifa executive member about the 79-year-old Swiss official.

Blatter, who has been at Fifa for 40 years, 17 as its president, went into the vote revered by some as the beautiful game's 'Jesus' and scorned by others as a rogue clinging to power.

The arrest on Wednesday of seven Fifa officials wanted by US authorities for accepting tens of millions of dollars of bribes seemed like a hammer blow to the veteran sports baron.

But he came through allegations about 'brown envelopes' handed out before his first election in 1998 and the collapse of the ISL sports marketing empire.

 

This week, Blatter's power base in Africa and Asia remained firm. Blatter said people around the world unfairly held him “ultimately responsible” for everything that goes on in football and a fifth term was won.

Blatter believes however that his jealous rivals no longer apply the notion of fair play in their backroom battles with him. He told the Congress he had a “question” about the timing of the arrests, two days before the election.

“In my 40 years at Fifa I have learned to live with hostility and resentment,” he said recently.

“However as the German language proverb puts it: sympathy is free, but envy must be earned.”

There is a lot to envy.

Blatter is in 70th place on the Forbes list of the world's most powerful people -- the only sports leader in the group jostling behind the likes of Vladimir Putin and Barack Obama.

The former amateur footballer -- an old fashioned striker -- joined Fifa in 1975 from a position marketing Swiss watches.

He became secretary general in 1981 and was elected to the top job in 1998 after another controversial president, Brazilian Joao Havelange, finally ended his 24 year reign.

Blatter, who also worked as a public relations official and general secretary of the Swiss ice hockey federation, claims credit for building Fifa's financial muscle -- $1.5 billion in cash reserves.

When he joined Fifa it was in a small Zurich building with about 10 staff. One story says that it was Blatter who went to the bank to get a loan when they could not be paid.

But Fifa made about $5.7 billion (5.3 billion euros) in the four years between the 2010 and 2014 World Cups and now has about 1,400 staff.

The workaholic Blatter says his main achievement has been to make football “universal” -- the first World Cups in Asia (South Korea and Japan in 2002 although the decision was taken before he became president) and Africa (2010) came in his tenure.

Hundreds of millions of dollars are given to national federations and in development grants.

 

But since the day he took office, accusations of skulduggery have never been far away from Fifa. In recent months, he has been fighting allegations about the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.

Blatter also told UEFA, the European confederation in 2011 that if elected then it would be his last term.

But the Fifa president has never been implicated in wrongdoing and he has always shrugged off controversy -- apart from one episode in 2006 when he tried to stop a book on Fifa being published in Switzerland,

And so the football world is divided.

Dominican Republic FA president Osiris Guzman last month compared Blatter to Jesus, Winston Churchill, Moses, Abraham Lincoln and Martin Luther King at a Central and North American confederation (CONCACAF) meeting.

Asia and Africa declared strong public support for Blatter against his challenger Prince Ali bin al Hussein, brother of Jordan's monarch.

But Europe has turned against him. UEFA leader Michel Platini says Blatter lied when he said in 2011 that he would stand down this time.

Platini says Blatter made some good decisions “often in difficult circumstances” but that now he cannot face a life of “emptiness” without Fifa's power.

Blatter, married three times and now helped a lot by his daughter Corinne, says he feels fit enough to go on.

Four years ago, Blatter thought it was his last mandate, he told reporters recently. But “times change”, he added.

Why does he keep getting re-elected?

“He has a way of making people dependent or indebted to him, but not in a way that people regret it,” one Blatter confidant told AFP.

“These people know where they are with Blatter.

“They don't know where they will be with someone else.”

AFP



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Blatter charms in last election pitch

Sepp Blatter used all the tricks of the old master he is after 17 years in the job to woo delegates in his last speech before the election.

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Zurich - Incumbent Fifa president Sepp Blatter used all the tricks of the old master he is after 17 years in the job to woo delegates at the Fifa Congress when he made his final election pitch before voting began for a new president on Friday.

The 79-year-old Swiss, who has been president since 1998 and is seeking a fifth term, gave a far more assured delivery than his challenger, 39-year-old Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan.

Prince Ali looked more nervous and his speech was a little lighter on substance than Blatter, who got a round of applause when he told the 209 delegates he “did not want to leave them”.

Blatter, who joined Fifa in 1975, said he felt that he had only been at Fifa for a short time and wanted to stay longer.

“What is time anyway. I find that the time I have spent at Fifa is very short,” he said, “The more one ages the more time flies by quickly. I am with you, and I would like to stay with you,” he said to a round of clapping.

Addressing the problems Fifa is facing regarding corruption charges against past and present members of world soccer's governing body, he said these problems needed to be addressed immediately. Change would start tomorrow, he said.

Prince Ali, who spent four years on the Fifa executive committee before leaving it on Friday to be replaced by Shaikh Salman of Bahrain, pledged an open, more democratic Fifa if he won the vote.

“We have heard in recent days, voices which described our Fifa as an avaricious body which feeds on the game that the world loves.

“We have heard questions raised about whether our family is morally bankrupt. And we have heard countless individuals ponder how on earth it could have gotten so bad.

“There are no easy answers. And no blame that can be cast that will wash away the stain that marks us all,” he said.

“Change is not an event. It is a process. It is not about empowering wrongdoing and then demanding to root it out. Our path - and our way to the future - must be lit by the creation of a culture that empowers transparency, inclusively and accountability.

“Our rehabilitation in public perception will only come through the actions and work of all of us, together, pulling in the same direction, for the good of the sport, and for Fifa,” the prince said.

Despite the problems facing the organisation Blatter was the overwhelming favourite to secure victory.

Reuters



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Palestine drops Israel Fifa suspension bid

The Palestine Football Association dropped its motion on Friday asking for Israel to be suspended by Fifa.

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Zurich - The Palestine Football Association (PFA) dropped its motion on Friday asking for Israel to be suspended by Fifa.

The motion had been included on the agenda at the Fifa Congress but PFA president Jibril Rajoub said he had been persuaded to back down. “I decided to drop the suspension but it does not mean that I give up the resistance,” he said.

The PFA has accused Israel of hampering its activities and restricting the movement of players between the Gaza Strip and the Israeli-occupied West Bank.

Israel cites security concerns for the restrictions it imposes and the country's football association has argued that it has no control over security forces.

Soccer's world governing body has been trying to settle the matter for two years and Blatter this month travelled to the region and meet Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Palestinian President Mahmud Abbas.

“A lot of colleagues who I respect and I appreciate explained to me how it is painful for them to hear in this family about the issue of suspension,” said Rajoub.

Reuters



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Blatter set to win new term

Sepp Blatter is expected to be re-elected, defying growing calls for him to step down in the face of corruption scandals.

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Zurich - World soccer boss Sepp Blatter was expected to be re-elected on Friday, defying growing calls for him to step down in the face of corruption scandals engulfing the sport's governing body.

Addressing delegates at Fifa's annual Congress in Switzerland, where members will later vote to decide the organisation's presidency, Blatter promised more transparency and urged members to remain unified.

Europe, which accounts for all but three of the countries that have ever made it to a World Cup's final match, is particularly keen to banish the 79-year-old Swiss. But Asian, African and Latin American states are expected to rally around him. Each of the 209 countries in Fifa has an equal vote.

On a visit to Berlin, British Prime Minister David Cameron told Blatter to go “the sooner the better”. Chancellor Angela Merkel said the dirty side of soccer must be cleaned up.

In a low key-address that contrasted with a more defiant reaction on Thursday, Blatter said he was “appealing to unity and team spirit so we can move forward together.”

He also sought to distance himself from the scandal, the biggest crisis Fifa has faced in its 111-year history.

U.S. authorities have accused top Fifa figures and sports executives of corruption, while Switzerland is investigating the award of the next World Cup finals to Russia and Qatar.

The scandal widened on Friday when Britain's Serious Fraud Office said it was examining possible corruption at Fifa.

A judge in Argentina has ordered the arrest of three businessmen accused of using bribery to obtain soccer media rights, and the Brazilian Senate moved to open a formal inquiry into soccer bribery allegations.

Fifa takes in billions of dollars in revenue from television marketing rights and sponsorships, making it one of the wealthiest and most powerful sports bodies in the world. It has been dogged by corruption scandals for decades, mostly investigating itself and avoiding scrutiny by criminal courts.

“We cannot watch everyone all the time. We have 1.6 billion people directly or indirectly touched by our game,” Blatter said.

Russia and Qatar deny wrongdoing in their successful bids to host the cup.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has accused the United States of meddling in an effort to prevent Blatter's re-election.

Qatar on Friday issued a further defence of its bid and said it would carry on with plans to stage the event. The decision to host the world's biggest soccer tournament in a small desert state where daytime summer temperatures rarely fall below 40 degrees Celsius startled many in global sport.

Blatter, who has been criticised for not doing enough to combat corruption in Fifa, is being challenged by Jordanian Prince Ali bin Al Hussein for the most powerful job in soccer.

Many of Blatter's opponents have spoken of steps they can take if he secures re-election. English Football Association chairman Greg Dyke said England could back a possible boycott of the 2018 World Cup if Blatter stays in office.

Other European soccer officials have also alluded to the prospect of a boycott, but that is still seen as unlikely given the tournament's importance to the global game.

Some countries that have supported Blatter said they were switching allegiance following the scandal, but the numbers still appeared to favour his re-election.

Most of the developing world in Africa, Asia and parts of Central America and the Caribbean are reluctant to vote for a new Fifa leadership given that the organization guarantees them annual grants and bonus payments in World Cup years.

Kuwait's Sheikh Ahmad Al-Fahad Al-Sabah, one of the most powerful men in world sport, said Blatter is the right man for the job and should be re-elected.

“Fifa should have a leader with a lot of experience,” the Fifa executive committee member told Reuters at Zurich's Baur au Lac hotel, where seven Fifa executives were arrested on Wednesday.

On Friday, New Zealand Football said it would vote for 39-year-old Prince Ali despite a previous unanimous commitment from countries in the Oceania Football Confederation in January to back Blatter. Canada also said it would not support Blatter.

Adding to the pressure on Fifa and Blatter, there are growing concerns from sponsors, many of whom have backed the organisation despite nearly 20 years of corruption allegations.

German sportswear company Adidas said Fifa should do more to establish transparent compliance standards. Anheuser-Busch InBev, whose Budweiser brand is a sponsor of the 2018 World Cup, said it was closely monitoring developments. Credit card company Visa urged immediate reforms and Coca-Cola said the charges had “tarnished the mission and ideals of the Fifa World Cup”.

Reuters



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Fifa to ref Safa dispute

Safa’s eThekwini Region is embroiled in a battle with the national football association that has now been referred to Fifa.

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Durban - The SA Football Association eThekwini Region is embroiled in a battle with the national football association that has now been referred to the Federation Internationale de Football Association’s legal division (Fifa).

In the midst of this battle, Safa eThekwini on Thursday launched two separate high court applications against their bank, FirstRand Bank Limited, to have their bank account unfrozen and almost R300 000 transferred back into this account.

In court papers, Safa eThekwini’s president, Alpha Mchunu, said they learned from their bank branch that this was done on instruction from Safa’s head office.

The bank’s attorney, Jason Michael Smith Incorporated Attorneys, on Thursday confirmed to the Daily News that they were not opposing this application and had complied by re-instating the account and transferring the money.

According to Mchunu’s affidavit in the separate court matters, the bank account was frozen at 11.59pm on April 23 with no communication to indicate why.

The eThekwini region had opened this account in 2006 and Mchunu said it operated without hindrance until April 24.

He said it was only after a meeting with the branch business manager that they learnt the bank was acting on instruction from Safa head office.

Further, after a visit to the bank on May 5 by Mchunu and Safa eThekwini’s vice president, Erik Smith, to try pay their staff salaries, they learned there was no money in the region’s account.

A few days later, and after a back and forth of communication between the bank and Safa eThekwini’s lawyer, they learned the bank transferred the funds into a new account on the instructions of Safa national.

The bank branch manager apparently also said this money was then moved into the bank’s suspense account until the issue of the frozen account was finalised.

Mchunu explained the possible reason their bank account was affected was because of their current dispute with Safa.

He said his branch held a quadrennial congress in August last year and their regional executive committee was elected. This included the election of a branch president (Mchunu), vice-president and general-secretary.

Mchunu said there were no complaints raised during these elections, but Safa sent a letter to their branch stating it did not recognise this quadrennial congress “implying that any decision taken at the congress was null and void”.

He said Safa did not provide any reasons for their decision but said that after a national emergency meeting, it was decided the eThekwini region was not functional and was placed under administration.

The region replied saying this decision was “unknown and unconstitutional”.

With no response, Mchunu said they wrote another letter declaring a dispute with Safa and called on them to “desist from interfering” in their administration and affairs.

However, Mchunu said in January the nationally appointed administrator convened a meeting at the Elangeni Hotel with members of the region and in April convened an “extraordinary congress” electing a parallel regional executive committee.

“What was strange about this was the fact that the members of the regional executive committee were not notified (of this congress) and that Safa called the regional executive committee members to its headquarters in Johannesburg on the same date as the congress,” read Mchunu’s affidavit.

He said they travelled to Johannesburg only to be told when they arrived that the meeting could not proceed.

“Obviously, the idea was to ensure that the regional executive committee was not part and parcel of the extraordinary congress.”

Safa then apparently sent out a letter congratulating the newly elected executive committee and said they would provide the new leadership with support and encouraged stakeholders to do the same.

It was then that the eThekwini region escalated the matter to Fifa and soon afterwards, Mchunu said, their bank account was frozen and the money was transferred out of the account.

Mchunu argued that Safa had no power to instruct a bank on the financial affairs of a regional structure and said the bank should not have taken instruction from a third party.

noelene.barbeau@inl.co.za

Daily News



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Fifa’s culture must change

Fifa's culture must change if it is to reclaim its credibility, a senior official told delegates at its annual congress.

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Zurich - Fifa's culture must change if it is to reclaim its credibility as an open and honest organisation, one of its own senior officials told delegates at its annual congress on Friday.

After Fifa president Sepp Blatter had spoken at the start of proceedings, repeating his nautical analogies about steering the good ship Fifa back to calm waters, Domenico Scala, chairman of the Audit and Compliance Committee, issued a stark warning.

“A change of culture within Fifa is essential if the organisation is to eliminate improper conduct,” the Swiss-Italian told delegates, adding that the change had to be articulated by football's leaders.

Fifa was rocked on Wednesday when seven officials were arrested in an early morning raid in Zurich as part of a joint United States/Swiss investigation into widespread malpractice involving a wide-ranging spread of Fifa activities since the early 1990s.

Scala told delegates that Fifa had restructured many of its internal bodies, with greater controls and limits, in a bid to stop the proliferation of corruption.

He repeated that it was soccer's world governing body who alerted the Swiss authorities last November about possible irregularities regarding the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids, but agreed more had to be done.

“Fifa has delivered an impressive list of material changes to its governance,” he said.

“However, to enact these changes across the entire football pyramid requires much more than a set of instruments. It requires recognition that the culture needs to change to ensure that changes become part of a new DNA of how the organisation, and the football community, operates.”

Fifa microscope

He said that Fifa was now under the microscope more than ever, adding: “The culture of an organisation, or a community, goes to the individual level, to the ethical and moral beliefs that guide the behaviour of all of us.

“To support the change we need a culture that censures inappropriate behaviour and enforces rules vigorously, fairly and responsively.

“Our culture needs to change through leaders at all levels of the football pyramid.

“It is the leaders' tone at the top that ensures it is embedded at all levels of the organisation. This tone must be honest and stop any malpractice to occur.

“It must be communicated with sincerity in both words and actions.”

He said that Fifa's role in the world was different from what it may have been in the past.

“We all need to live up to our responsibilities to comply with ethical and legal standards, and our own internal rules and regulations, in order to protect the game of football, because Fifa's reputation across the world has changed dramatically.

“Everything is under the microscope. Nothing goes unnoticed so we must try and prevent any wrongdoing or errors.”

Among those arrested or indicted this week were two current Fifa vice-presidents, a former Fifa vice-president and members of its ruling executive committee. – Reuters



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Bomb scare at Fifa congress

Zurich police confirmed they were responding to a bomb alert at the venue where Fifa is hosting its annual congress.

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Zurich police confirmed they were responding to a bomb alert at the venue where Fifa is hosting its widely-watched annual congress, amid a massive corruption scandal rocking world football's governing body.

Zurich police spokeswoman Brigitte Vogt confirmed to that a bomb alert had been received at the venue.

“The police are there,” she said, refusing to provide further details. – AFP



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Platini haunted by Heysel disaster

Uefa president Michel Platini said he is still haunted by memories of the Heysel Stadium disaster on the 30th anniversary of the tragedy.

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Uefa president Michel Platini said he is still haunted by memories of the Heysel Stadium disaster on the 30th anniversary of the tragedy during which 39 football fans died.

The former French midfield star was playing in the Juventus side against Liverpool on May 29 1985 in the European Cup final when the Brussels stadium became synonymous with tragedy.

Platini's second-half penalty sealed Juventus' 1-0 victory, but the result was completely over-shadowed by the disaster which resulted in British clubs banned from European competition.

Several Liverpool fans were eventually found guilty of manslaughter after the 39 mostly Juventus fans were killed and some 600 supporters injured after a wall collapsed.

“Thirty years ago, I played in a European Champion Clubs' Cup final at the Heysel Stadium in Brussels. And I continue to play in that final,” the 59-year-old said in a statement.

“It hasn't left me, just like it hasn't left anyone else who was there that night.

“It remains with all those who lost a loved one, for whom everything changed in a few terrible minutes.

“Thirty years later, I am the president of Uefa and I am working every day with all my colleagues to ensure that we will never again experience the horror of such a night.

“We have been working unceasingly for the last 30 years to guarantee safety and security at sporting venues across Europe.

“My thoughts are with the 39 people who lost their lives, and, of course, with their friends and families.

“I can only express my deepest sympathy and reiterate that I am still doing everything in my power to prevent such a tragedy from happening again.”

The head of European football's governing body Uefa is in Zurich to attend the 65th Fifa congress. – AFP



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They knew Warner was corrupt

Kevin McCallum says all those who have wanted to win the right to host the World Cup, courted a certain Jack Warner.

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Here’s the thing about Jack Warner. No matter how much football officials knew about his penchant for a decent backhander, all those who have wanted to win the right to host the World Cup bid courted him. They knew he was corrupt, overbearing and hungry for money.

They all knew, but Warner had the power over the three Concacaf votes and they needed them. Those votes helped South Africa beat Morocco 14-10 in the 2010 bid. South Africa went out of their way to get them. At the time, it was believed they had just pimped out Nelson Mandela to Warner to get them, but the allegation of a $10-million backhander organised by two co-conspirators and paid through Fifa, suggests they felt the need to sweeten the pot more.

In his book, ‘Foul!’, Andrew Jennings outlines just how much Madiba was put through the mill to keep Warner happy.

“Ten of Fifa’s committee attended the inauguration of President Thabo Mbeki’s second term of office in late April (2004). Jack (Warner) and his party got better seats than some world leaders… What more did the South Africans have to do? Much more. Warner demanded an hour of Mandela’s time and promptly invited him and Archbishop Desmond Tutu to visit Trinidad. “(Mandela) went out to do battle again for his beloved country. He arrived late at night at Piarco airport… Sepp Blatter wanted his pound of Mandela flesh. He rushed to Trinidad and elbowed Jack out of the way to take centre spot the day after Mandela’s arrival. Blatter pumped the old man’s hand when he arrived at The Oval, the largest cricket ground in the West Indies, to be publicly exhibited.

“Frail Nelson Mandela was helped by an aide up on to the stage. He told the huge crowd that he had defied his doctor’s orders to end all international travel. ‘This is my last trip abroad – I am here to plead,’ he said. After 15 minutes he had to leave to rest in his hotel room.

“Bribes to Fifa officials were usually a taboo subject but in the week before the vote, the South Africans, probably acting on their own secret intelligence, spoke out. ‘If we have to choose between corrupting people and losing, let’s just lose,’ said Essop Pahad, one of Mbeki’s ministers. ‘We’re not going to give any money to anyone under the table.’

“Zurich, 14 May 2004. President Mbeki arrived at the Dolder Grand Hotel soon after seven in the morning, the day before the decision. Mandela followed shortly after. They must have been tired, travelling all night, but as they checked in Warner and Blazer were on their heels in the lobby.

“Warner said he needed another round of pleading because, ‘Unfortunately, Concacaf is still undecided’.” Another hour with Madiba persuaded him. Well, that, and, it is alleged, some cash. - The Star



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How Blatter gained Africa’s support

Fifa's mission, which it shares with every sports governing body, is to expand the game it administers.

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Fifa's mission, which it shares with every sports governing body, is to expand the game it administers. That is hard to achieve in a country incapable of watching its own national team on television.

Such was the case in Mauritania, a large West African nation with a population of 3.5 million, before Fifa's development money arrived in 2013. The money was closely followed by a visit from the Fifa president, Sepp Blatter. The studios were quickly built.

“We now have a TV production unit, one of the first of its kind in Africa,” explained the president of the Mauritanian Football Association, Ahmed Ould Yahya, at the time. “We've signed a contract with the national broadcasting company and we show matches every week. That is really changing the image of the game in the country.”

Before the money arrived, Mauritanian football had effectively collapsed. It had never played in an international tournament, and fallen out of the world rankings. It is still struggling, but now it also has pitches and facilities, all paid for by Fifa. Mauritania has never played in a World Cup, but has had its share of the profits. All 209 Fifa member nations receive an equal share of the income from the tournament in Brazil in 2014, around $1.2m (£783,000).

Last time around, this amount was even higher. Blatter has for decades spoken of his mission to bring a World Cup to Africa, which he finally achieved in 2010. “When we decided to hold the World Cup in Africa, we encountered objections from a lot of people who said it would be a failure,” the president said in 2013, outside the newly constructed football centre in the Mauritanian capital, Nouakchott. “Instead, South Africa 2010 was an unprecedented success and that allowed us to pay out a bonus to all the member associations.”

This money has prompted many a genuine football revolution in the developing world. But like all aid money, much of it has been badly audited and some of it, undoubtedly, purloined. For president Blatter, it hardly matters. Both these outcomes buy loyalty.

Many of these Fifa-funded national football centres bear the name of the country's federation chief who brought them there. (Uruguay and Brazil's centres carry the names of Nicolas Leoz and Jose Maria Marin, two men indicted by the US on Wednesday.) And it is they who must decide, every four years, whether to vote for Blatter.

Other candidates in this election, notably Luis Figo, pledged to return even more money to the national associations of developing nations, and increase the number of teams competing in the World Cup to 48.

As Manuel Nascimento-Lopes, Fifa's man in Guinea Bissau, said yesterday: “People are always trying to knock Blatter. Africa will vote for Mr Blatter and I will follow that. It's not all about the major European football countries. We are going to vote for Blatter. How do we know anyone else would be any better?” – The Independent



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Russia, Qatar caused crisis - Blatter

Fifa may have avoided its current problems if Russia and Qatar had not been chosen as hosts, Sepp Blatter said.

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Zurich - Scandal-plagued Fifa may have avoided its current problems if Russia and Qatar had not been chosen as hosts of the next two World Cups, President Sepp Blatter said.

“On Dec 2, 2010, here in Zurich, when we decided on the two World Cup hosts in one session, if two other countries had emerged from the envelope, I think we would not have these problems today.

“But we cannot go back in time, we are not prophets, we cannot say what would have happened,” added Blatter, who did not elaborate on his comments.

Russia was chosen as the host nation of the 2018 World Cup and Qatar for 2022 at a single vote in Zurich in 2010.

Blatter also questioned the timing of Wednesday's arrest of seven soccer officials, including Fifa vice-president Jeffrey Webb, in a dawn raid on a luxury Zurich hotel.

They are being held in custody pending an extradition request to the United States where they are wanted on corruption charges.

“It's not good for all of this to emerge two days before Fifa presidential elections.

“I'm not going to use the word coincidence but there is a small question mark,” Blatter, who is standing for re-election later on Friday, said in address to the Fifa Congress.

England, Spain/Portugal and Netherlands/Belgium were also bidding for 2018, while the United States, South Korea, Japan and Australia were Qatar's rivals for 2022.

Fifa launched an investigation into allegations of corruption in the process but found no grounds for re-running the vote.

Blatter, who has been heavily criticised for not doing enough to combat corruption in Fifa, is being challenged by Jordanian Prince Ali bin Al Hussein for the most powerful job in soccer.

His opening address was briefly interrupted by a female protester waving a Palestinian flag and shouting at Blatter before being removed. “Security, please,” said Blatter when the protester burst in.

“Today, I am appealing to unity and team spirit so we can move forward together,” he said.

“It may not always be easy but he we are here together today to tackle the problems that have been created. We are we are here to solve them.”

He continued: “We are at a turning point. We cannot constantly supervise everybody that is involved in football.

“We have 209 national associations, six continental confederations, we have more than 300 million active participants, men and women, and with families and friends, we reach a figure of 1.6 billion people directly or indirectly touched by our game.”

“It's a matter of trust, of commitment, of having the will to do it ... so let us believe, let's go for it, let's repair what has been dropped.”

“I appeal to all of you to join us the executive committee and president, to put Fifa back on the right track and where the boat will stop rocking and go placidly into port.” – Reuters



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Villa slap £32m price tag on Benteke

Tim Sherwood has admitted he is powerless to stop Christian Benteke leaving Aston Villa.

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Tim Sherwood has admitted he is powerless to stop Christian Benteke leaving Aston Villa after revealing the Belgian striker has a release clause.

Liverpool are readying a bid for the 24-year-old, who has scored 12 goals in 14 games since Sherwood’s arrival, and Sportsmail understands £32.5million would trigger the clause.

The FA Cup final against Arsenal at Wembley could well prove Benteke’s last in a Villa shirt with much interest generated by his return to form.

‘There’s a buy-out clause in his contract so it will be impossible for us to stop him if he wants to go,’ admitted Sherwood. ‘Someone’s got to meet it and if they don’t it won’t be considered because we don’t want to lose him.’ Daily Mail



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48 hours that swung 2010 vote

IOL covered the 48 hours that swung the 2010 vote - and the crucial role played by Jack Warner and Chuck Blazer.

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* This article was orignially published on IOL on the 13 May, 2004

Zurich - Jack Warner, a “defector”, appears to hold South Africa's World Cup 2010 destiny in his hands.

The Trinidadian head of Concacaf (Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football) once said “South Africa's 2010 World Cup bid's dead without (bid chief) Danny Jordaan”.

Well, it will be, unless Jordaan - over the next 48 hours - does some of the smoothest negotiating of his life once he arrives in Zurich on Thursday to put the finishing touches to South Africa's 2010 World Cup bid.

Ironically, Warner was one of South Africa's biggest and most vociferous supporters for the 2006 bid. But that has not been the case this time around, with Warner making a point of saying he has never publicly backed South Africa's 2010 bid.

Rumours which first surfaced months ago - that Warner has been strongly linked to the Moroccans - just won't go away.

In Zurich, those rumours have been given even more credence.

Warner's defection wouldn't be such a bitter pill to stomach, but it's a well-known fact that he also controls the fate of the votes of his fellow Concacaf Fifa executive members, American Chuck Blazer and Costa Rica's Isaac Sasso-Sasso.

Blazer and Sasso-Sasso have made no bones about the fact that Warner's their “boss”, and a very senior Fifa source - in reference to the way Concacaf's trio would vote on Saturday - reiterated again on Thursday night that “they'll never split”.

So three votes, in what will by all accounts be a very close race between South Africa and Morocco, will be a potentially crippling blow to Jordaan's hopes.

Another undecided vote as late as Thursday was that of Belgian Michel D'Hooge.

South Africa appears to have garnered the majority of the eight European votes, with Swiss Fifa president Sepp Blatter, Sweden's Lennart Johannson, Scotland's David Will, Russia's Viacheslav Koloskov and Germany's Gerhard Mayer-Vorfelder tipped to go with South Africa, offsetting the votes for Morocco by France's Michel Platini, Spain's Angel Maria Villa Llona and Turkey's Senes Erzik.

With five out of eight European votes secured, South Africa desperately need D'Hooge's vote to make it six.

And with the South American trio of Fifa executives - Brazil's Ricardo Teixeira, Paraguay's Nicolas Leoz and Argentina's Julio Grondona - all firmly in South Africa's corner, along with Oceania's Ahingalu Fusimalohi, Jordaan must still feel confident.

He knows, however, that he is guaranteed only two out of a possible eight Asian and African votes, which could all go Morocco's way once the likes of Tunisia, Egypt and Libya are eliminated.

So, as things stand, it seems South Africa can be reasonably confident of just 10 votes. It badly needs the votes of Warner's trio of Concacaf voters and D'Hooge, otherwise it could be a very sad day indeed for 45-million South Africans on Saturday.

Jordaan and bid chairperson Irvin Khoza must have seen the Warner warning signs coming a while ago.

And that is why, when they had eight Fifa executive members in South Africa, including Blatter, for the country's 10 years of democracy celebrations a month ago, it was Warner who was selected to have a one-on-one meeting with Nelson Mandela.

And as Warner left the country, Mandela even took the drastic step of following him just hours later for a trip across the world to attend Concacaf's congress in Grenada.

Mandela will come face to face with the 24 Fifa executives at 5pm on Friday, when South Africa's 2010 bid team get the final chance to engage with the men who hold their fate in their hands.



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Warner rushed off in ambulance

Former Fifa Vice President Jack Warner, implicated in a corruption case against senior Fifa officials, left jail in Trinidad and Tobago via ambulance after he was granted bail.

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Port of Spain - Former Fifa Vice President Jack Warner, who has been accused of soliciting bribes as part of a vast corruption case against senior soccer officials, left jail in Trinidad and Tobago via ambulance on Thursday after he was granted bail, according to local media.

Warner is among nine Fifa officials and five corporate executives charged by the U.S. Department of Justice with running a criminal enterprise that involved more than $150 million in bribes. Fifa is the global body governing soccer.

Once one of the most powerful men in Fifa, Warner surrendered to authorities on Wednesday after U.S. officials sought his extradition.

Prosecutors say Warner solicited bribes worth $10 million from the South African government to host the 2010 World Cup and diverted bribes for personal use.

Warner issued a statement protesting his innocence on Wednesday as Fifa reeled from police raids in Switzerland and the United States, as well as a second investigation opened by the Swiss authorities into the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

Warner, who faces 12 charges included racketeering and bribery, said on Wednesday he was innocent and noted he had left soccer activities four years ago. “Over the past several years I have recommitted my life to the work of improving the lot of every citizen of every creed and race in this nation,” he said in a statement. – Reuters



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