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Sepp Blatter Quits as FIFA President

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Sepp Blatter on Tuesday resigned as president of FIFA as a mounting corruption scandal engulfed world football's governing body.

The 79-year-old Swiss official, FIFA president for 17 years and only re-elected on Friday, said a special congress would be called as soon as possible to elect a successor. (Sepp Blatter- From Wedding singer to FIFA Boss)

Blatter said that the scandal-tainted FIFA needs "profound reconstruction" and that he had "thoroughly reconsidered" his presidency since his reelection.

He added that the vote "does not seem to be supported by everybody in the world of football."
His resignation came less than a week after Swiss police arrested seven FIFA officials, including two vice presidents, at a Zurich hotel.

The arrests were carried out on behalf of US prosecutors who accuse the seven, and eight other suspects, of involvement in $150 million of bribes

Sepp Blatter Quits as FIFA President Amid Corruption Scandal - Football News
 
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All asian and african countries supported him. Africans call him the most pro african fifa president ever.
 
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Well done FBI!
And "your" FBI does not dare bother Wall Street Banks and rampant corruption there-but you have no problems with it.But now you are showing such deep concerns for FIFA corruption. Wonder why?Well apart from your hypocrisy and double standards of course.

All asian and african countries supported him. Africans call him the most pro african fifa president ever.
160 countries voted for him.Check the list.Guess who voted against? USA and vassals only .
 
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I think now the path is cleared for Qatari prince to be the next FIFA president
 
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DoJ Lockdown game STRONG. Awesome.
image.jpg
 
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Just hope some European don't get elected as FIFA President. They will give more power to UEFA and top European nations.
 
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Nationality should not be important. It's about improving the reputation of the highest governing body in world football and fixing the ills of FIFA.

In all seriousness Europeans (especially French, Brits, Italians, Germans and Spaniards) are on average better football officials than other areas of the world simply due to the importance of football in Europe and the experience most officials have.

I think that Prince Ali, Figo and Michael van der Praag are all good choices but it's not about the head of FIFA but more about cleaning the organization from top to bottom.
 
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Qatar and Putin’s FIFA Friend Is Dead
There isn’t a bribe big enough for either of them to keep the World Cup after Sepp Blatter resigns.

LONDON — Soccer’s World Cup plans were cast into chaos Tuesday as Sepp Blatter announced that he would stand down as president of FIFA. At a shock press conference just four days after he was re-elected as the most powerful man in world sports, Blatter asked the organization to select a new leader.

Blatter’s stunning departure from soccer will reopen the battle to host the next two World Cups after the selection process was mired by allegations of bribery. The United States finished second in the voting for the 2022 tournament that went to Qatar, but widespread reports of illegal payments have raised questions over the legitimacy of Gulf emirate’s hosting—to say nothing of its use of what’s been called slave labor.

Vladimir Putin, who took a close personal interest in Russia’s successful 2018 bid, will also be nervous Tuesday night as his friend Blatter announced that he will stand down from FIFA as soon as a successor is elected. The process is expected to be complete by March 2016.

The new president will be forced to hold a thorough internal investigation into the organization and, if FBI claims are to be believed, it seems likely that the World Cup bidding process for 2018 and 2022 would be heavily criticized. That would make it extremely difficult not to re-evaluate who should host the tournaments.

Dawn raids on a luxury hotel in Switzerland last week plunged soccer’s governing body into the most serious crisis in its 111-year history. An indictment unsealed in Brooklyn outlined charges against 14 men accused of operating a scheme of money laundering, fraud, and cover-ups for 24 years. Among those arrested were FIFA’s vice president and a former vice president.

Blatter ignored the clamor from prime ministers, presidents and European football leaders to stand down last week or at least postpone the presidential election. “Why would I step down?” he told Swiss TV. “That would mean I recognize that I did wrong.”

Just four days later, he returned to the stage at FIFA’s headquarters in Zurich to announce that he would be stepping down after all. It has been widely reported that the FBI is continuing to examine his personal role in the alleged corruption, but Blatter claimed it was the reaction of the football world that forced him to retire early.

“I have decided to lay down my mandate,” he said. “While I have a mandate from the membership of FIFA, I do not feel that I have a mandate from the entire world of football—the fans, the players, the clubs, the people who live, breathe and love football as much as we all do at FIFA.”

“What matters to me more than anything is that when all of this is over, football is the winner,” Blatter said.

Greg Dyke, head of the English Football Association and one of Blatter’s most outspoken critics, said he was delighted by the change of heart.

“At long last we can sort out Fifa. We can go back to looking at those two World Cups. If I were Qatar right now I wouldn’t be feeling very comfortable.”

Michel Platini, the former star player for France and current boss of European football, is the favorite to replace Blatter. Last week, Planti old Blatter to his face last week that he must stand down for the good of football.

“It was a difficult decision, a brave decision, and the right decision,” he said today.

Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, who ran against Blatter for president last week, confirmed that he would run again, as did David Ginola, who dropped out of the last race a few weeks into his candidacy.

Blatter’s sudden resignation announcement came after a disastrous day of PR management that was unraveling fast in the face of further allegations and freshly leaked evidence.

The most damning of the FBI’s world soccer allegations concerns a $10 million payment made direct from FIFA’s headquarters to the private bank account of a man who has been described as one of the most corrupt in sporting history.

American investigators say this payment may have provided the most direct evidence of collusion at the very top of FIFA. Shaken soccer officials responded earlier in the day by trying to pin it on a dead man.

An internal document contradicting claims that FIFA’s former finance chief had been the man to authorize the payment gave the impression that FIFA was continuing to cover up allegations of corruption.

U.S. authorities claimed the $10 million in cash was a bribe intended to secure support for South Africa hosting the 2010 World Cup. South Africa was unable to find the vast sum of money, so it asked FIFA to send the funds on their behalf.

At the end of last week, FIFA spokepeople said they were not at liberty to discuss an ongoing investigation and were thus unable to explain why they had done so. That was before the allegations had reached yet higher into the organization, however.

Reports in the U.K. over the weekend claimed that the payment must have been approved by Jérôme Valcke, FIFA’s general secretary and Blatter’s No. 2. On Tuesday, The New York Times cited anonymous American officials who said Valcke was indeed the “high-ranking FIFA official,” fingered in the indictment that was accused of making the payment in 2008.

After the latest claims, FIFA decided that it could now address the reports. In a statement released Tuesday morning, a spokesman said it was not Valcke who authorized the payment that went directly into the private account of Trinidadian official Jack Warner, who was the head of soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean at the time. The FIFA statement said the transfer of funds was authorized by the chairman of FIFA’s finance committee, Julio Grondona.

So, FIFA was claiming to offer transparency at last. What did this man have to say about his extraordinary decision to approve the unusual payment?

Nothing. Grondona had suffered an aortic aneurysm and died suddenly last summer.

The FIFA statement also claimed these funds were not a bribe; this was an altruistic act of charity by the South African Football Association who had asked FIFA to help them set up “The Diaspora Legacy Programme.” This project was intended “to support the African diaspora in Caribbean countries” so that South Africa could share the spoils of their World Cup legacy.

The money was transferred to Warner but the project was never announced in either the South African or the Caribbean press. In fact, Google and media database searches show no public mention of the program anywhere in the world before this week.

Less than a year after his death, Grondona was dragged into the center of the most serious crisis in FIFA’s history. In a soccer executive career that lasted more than 50 years, however, he was no stranger to controversy.

His son admitted illegally re-selling tickets at the World Cup in Brazil last year, and he was previously forced to apologize after an “unacceptable” public attack on England and the United States. He said he would never vote for the U.S. to host the World Cup in 2022 because the country was too close to the English, who he described as “liars” and “pirates.”

In 2003, when he was a senior vice president at FIFA, he made a bizarre anti-Semitic statement.

“I do not believe a Jew can ever be a referee at [the top] level. It’s hard work and, you know, Jews don’t like hard work.”

His career in the highest echelons of FIFA continued unchecked.

Grondona’s name, however, was absent from a letter dated March 2008 that emerged today. The note from the South African FA to FIFA about the $10 million payment was addressed to Valcke and detailed the money “promised” to the personal account of Warner.

“The Diaspora Legacy Programme shall be administered and implemented directly by the president of CONCACAF who shall act as a fiduciary of the Diaspora Legacy Programme Fund of $10 million,” wrote Dr. Oliphant, president of the South African Football Association.

The FBI says $750,000 was shared with Chuck Blazer, the U.S. soccer official who has co-operated with American investigators. It’s unclear what happened to the rest of the cash, but the diaspora is still waiting.

Qatar and Putin’s FIFA Friend Is Dead - The Daily Beast
 
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Qatar and Putin’s FIFA Friend Is Dead
There isn’t a bribe big enough for either of them to keep the World Cup after Sepp Blatter resigns.

LONDON — Soccer’s World Cup plans were cast into chaos Tuesday as Sepp Blatter announced that he would stand down as president of FIFA. At a shock press conference just four days after he was re-elected as the most powerful man in world sports, Blatter asked the organization to select a new leader.

Blatter’s stunning departure from soccer will reopen the battle to host the next two World Cups after the selection process was mired by allegations of bribery. The United States finished second in the voting for the 2022 tournament that went to Qatar, but widespread reports of illegal payments have raised questions over the legitimacy of Gulf emirate’s hosting—to say nothing of its use of what’s been called slave labor.

Vladimir Putin, who took a close personal interest in Russia’s successful 2018 bid, will also be nervous Tuesday night as his friend Blatter announced that he will stand down from FIFA as soon as a successor is elected. The process is expected to be complete by March 2016.

The new president will be forced to hold a thorough internal investigation into the organization and, if FBI claims are to be believed, it seems likely that the World Cup bidding process for 2018 and 2022 would be heavily criticized. That would make it extremely difficult not to re-evaluate who should host the tournaments.

Dawn raids on a luxury hotel in Switzerland last week plunged soccer’s governing body into the most serious crisis in its 111-year history. An indictment unsealed in Brooklyn outlined charges against 14 men accused of operating a scheme of money laundering, fraud, and cover-ups for 24 years. Among those arrested were FIFA’s vice president and a former vice president.

Blatter ignored the clamor from prime ministers, presidents and European football leaders to stand down last week or at least postpone the presidential election. “Why would I step down?” he told Swiss TV. “That would mean I recognize that I did wrong.”

Just four days later, he returned to the stage at FIFA’s headquarters in Zurich to announce that he would be stepping down after all. It has been widely reported that the FBI is continuing to examine his personal role in the alleged corruption, but Blatter claimed it was the reaction of the football world that forced him to retire early.

“I have decided to lay down my mandate,” he said. “While I have a mandate from the membership of FIFA, I do not feel that I have a mandate from the entire world of football—the fans, the players, the clubs, the people who live, breathe and love football as much as we all do at FIFA.”

“What matters to me more than anything is that when all of this is over, football is the winner,” Blatter said.

Greg Dyke, head of the English Football Association and one of Blatter’s most outspoken critics, said he was delighted by the change of heart.

“At long last we can sort out Fifa. We can go back to looking at those two World Cups. If I were Qatar right now I wouldn’t be feeling very comfortable.”

Michel Platini, the former star player for France and current boss of European football, is the favorite to replace Blatter. Last week, Planti old Blatter to his face last week that he must stand down for the good of football.

“It was a difficult decision, a brave decision, and the right decision,” he said today.

Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, who ran against Blatter for president last week, confirmed that he would run again, as did David Ginola, who dropped out of the last race a few weeks into his candidacy.

Blatter’s sudden resignation announcement came after a disastrous day of PR management that was unraveling fast in the face of further allegations and freshly leaked evidence.

The most damning of the FBI’s world soccer allegations concerns a $10 million payment made direct from FIFA’s headquarters to the private bank account of a man who has been described as one of the most corrupt in sporting history.

American investigators say this payment may have provided the most direct evidence of collusion at the very top of FIFA. Shaken soccer officials responded earlier in the day by trying to pin it on a dead man.

An internal document contradicting claims that FIFA’s former finance chief had been the man to authorize the payment gave the impression that FIFA was continuing to cover up allegations of corruption.

U.S. authorities claimed the $10 million in cash was a bribe intended to secure support for South Africa hosting the 2010 World Cup. South Africa was unable to find the vast sum of money, so it asked FIFA to send the funds on their behalf.

At the end of last week, FIFA spokepeople said they were not at liberty to discuss an ongoing investigation and were thus unable to explain why they had done so. That was before the allegations had reached yet higher into the organization, however.

Reports in the U.K. over the weekend claimed that the payment must have been approved by Jérôme Valcke, FIFA’s general secretary and Blatter’s No. 2. On Tuesday, The New York Times cited anonymous American officials who said Valcke was indeed the “high-ranking FIFA official,” fingered in the indictment that was accused of making the payment in 2008.

After the latest claims, FIFA decided that it could now address the reports. In a statement released Tuesday morning, a spokesman said it was not Valcke who authorized the payment that went directly into the private account of Trinidadian official Jack Warner, who was the head of soccer in North and Central America and the Caribbean at the time. The FIFA statement said the transfer of funds was authorized by the chairman of FIFA’s finance committee, Julio Grondona.

So, FIFA was claiming to offer transparency at last. What did this man have to say about his extraordinary decision to approve the unusual payment?

Nothing. Grondona had suffered an aortic aneurysm and died suddenly last summer.

The FIFA statement also claimed these funds were not a bribe; this was an altruistic act of charity by the South African Football Association who had asked FIFA to help them set up “The Diaspora Legacy Programme.” This project was intended “to support the African diaspora in Caribbean countries” so that South Africa could share the spoils of their World Cup legacy.

The money was transferred to Warner but the project was never announced in either the South African or the Caribbean press. In fact, Google and media database searches show no public mention of the program anywhere in the world before this week.

Less than a year after his death, Grondona was dragged into the center of the most serious crisis in FIFA’s history. In a soccer executive career that lasted more than 50 years, however, he was no stranger to controversy.

His son admitted illegally re-selling tickets at the World Cup in Brazil last year, and he was previously forced to apologize after an “unacceptable” public attack on England and the United States. He said he would never vote for the U.S. to host the World Cup in 2022 because the country was too close to the English, who he described as “liars” and “pirates.”

In 2003, when he was a senior vice president at FIFA, he made a bizarre anti-Semitic statement.

“I do not believe a Jew can ever be a referee at [the top] level. It’s hard work and, you know, Jews don’t like hard work.”

His career in the highest echelons of FIFA continued unchecked.

Grondona’s name, however, was absent from a letter dated March 2008 that emerged today. The note from the South African FA to FIFA about the $10 million payment was addressed to Valcke and detailed the money “promised” to the personal account of Warner.

“The Diaspora Legacy Programme shall be administered and implemented directly by the president of CONCACAF who shall act as a fiduciary of the Diaspora Legacy Programme Fund of $10 million,” wrote Dr. Oliphant, president of the South African Football Association.

The FBI says $750,000 was shared with Chuck Blazer, the U.S. soccer official who has co-operated with American investigators. It’s unclear what happened to the rest of the cash, but the diaspora is still waiting.

Qatar and Putin’s FIFA Friend Is Dead - The Daily Beast

The Garcia report pretty much proved that most if not all of the bidders were involved in shady business. Similar to how South Africa and Brazil were awarded their respective World Cups.

Singling out Qatar and Russia is silly. I really doubt that Russia and Qatar will be stripped off their World Cups but if that happens they would have a very good case in a court. Especially in terms of damages.
 
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The Garcia report pretty much proved that most if not all of the bidders were involved in shady business. Similar to how South Africa and Brazil were awarded their respective World Cups.

Singling out Qatar and Russia is silly. I really doubt that Russia and Qatar will be stripped off their World Cups but if that happens they would have a very good case in a court. Especially in terms of damages.
Agreed. My friend who was Sepp's right hand man in Zurich right thru late 90s till early 2005 was very open with me. Sepp ran slots for the finals; if you did not pay you did not get in.

The article fails to highlight that 2006 cup was stolen from South Africa with bribes by the Germans. It was therefore a cost of doing business with FIFA if you wanted the world cup. When in Rome do what the romans do was how you have to play the game with Sepp.

Funny, FBI goes after FIFA but overlooks Wall street CEO who have robbed billions and still gotten tax payer fund bailouts.

Irrespective, FIFA leadership should go to someone who can clean the house and bring back integrity to the beautiful game.
 
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