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      Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along

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      Swab
      • Forum Legend - Paisley
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      Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Jun 04, 2014 10:36:03 am
      Excellent article in todays Guardian by Simon Jenkins


      Why is world sport so corrupt? Olympics, football, cycling, even cricket have been enveloped in scandals of doping, match-fixing, transfer bungs and venue bribery. The Sunday Times' exposure of alleged corruption in Fifa's choice of countries to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups is overwhelming. Yet Michael Garcia, the American lawyer appointed by Fifa to inquire into previous similar allegations, has said he will ignore it. His inquiry is rendered a farce.

      The further any public activity drifts from accountability, the more it invites suspicion. When the activity is as popular and profitable as international sport, the scope for venality seems limitless. Distant oligarchies write their own constitutions and account only to equally introverted national associations. They seem immune to criticism or pressure to reform, many of them ensconced in Switzerland's haven for the secretive and the tax averse.

      All that is new in the Sunday Times revelation is the weight of the evidence, seemingly millions of emails leaked by a whistleblower and strongly denied by Qatar. Fifa itself does little but organise World Cups, amassing a revenue reserve of $1.4bn in the process. Yet its history since 2006, when the maverick journalist Andrew Jennings began his inquiries, could be a script for The Godfather. Jennings's allegations, followed up by Panorama and the Sunday Times, are a catalogue of slush funds, kickbacks, bribes and favouritism. Commercial offshoots are said to be run by insiders and family members of the Fifa president, Sepp Blatter.

      Fifa's claim is that host countries benefit from its blessings. The audit on South Africa's 2010 World Cup showed it cost the taxpayers £3bn for a return of £323m and an economic slump. This month's extravaganza in Brazil, which was pledged to cost the ill-resourced country nothing, has seen state spending on stadiums alone of £2bn, with another £9bn on infrastructure. Qatar is reputed to be spending a staggering £120bn. These sums for a brief sporting festival are obscene, whoever is paying.

      To each and every accusation of corruption, Fifa gives a flat denial or a "not proven". Blatter casts aside rivals, critics and gross offenders, such as the Caribbean's Jack Warner, if they blatantly tarnish the image of his "family within". Bigwigs such as Henry Kissinger, Johan Cruyff and Lords Coe and Goldsmith are occasionally invited to dust Fifa with an aura of ethical sanctity. But when stories emerge of $40,000 in hundred-dollar bills laid out for Fifa's Caribbean supporters, Fifa blithely explains them as "intended for distribution to the poor".

      The chickens of Britain's humiliating bid to "win" the 2018 World Cup are coming home to roost. The bid meant cringing subservience to the villain of the piece, Qatar's Mohammed bin Hammam, inviting him to Downing Street and Windsor Castle to meet the Queen, which he snubbed. It meant forcing the FA chairman, David Triesman, to resign for "inadvertently" hinting at Fifa corruption. It meant trying to censor the BBC for broadcasting similar "unhelpful" revelations on the eve of the 2010 vote.

      David Cameron, the Duke of Cambridge and David Beckham, proclaimed as the "three lions", went in person to lobby Fifa board members before the vote in Zurich, despite newspaper warnings that it had been fixed. Vladimir Putin, who clearly knew he had already won, did not bother turning up. Cameron and Co were left looking like small-time bootleggers who had tried to outsmart Al Capone and were lucky to have escaped in the gutter with just a few broken limbs.

      Successive evidence from Fifa whistleblowers over the past eight years has been damning. Yet until Britain was worsted in 2010, it parroted Blatter's defence of "not proven", fearing to lose any favours in its race for glory. The FA chairman Greg Dyke, 2018 bid executive Andy Anson and Commons sports committee chairman, John Whittingdale, now profess their shock at the allegations in the Sunday Times. But such allegations have been in the air for years. Why no shock from 2006 to 2010?

      The one sanction against an international body is for its members to boycott it. The American soccer authorities, to their credit, have said they will not bid for any tournaments until Fifa is reformed. Yet Britain apparently wants to return to the same snake pit. With the decisions on 2018 and 2022 possibly now in abeyance, they are drooling at the prospect of becoming the venue by default.

      "Winning" a World Cup used to be about a game of football. Now, as George Orwell said, it is war without the shooting, "bound up with hatred, jealousy, boastfulness and disregard of all rules". When winning is no longer a matter of sport but of national pride, it comes to seem a grinding national necessity. When glory is at stake, expense is no object and government goes mad. The heads of the IOC and Fifa are greeted like heads of state. Firms that make millions from these mega-events have ministers dance attendance on them. It is small wonder that priorities are so distorted as to ludicrously "award" a football tournament to Qatar in high summer. Even Blatter now calls that "a mistake".

      Unreasoning government is always dangerous. When unreason is fed by corruption, and corruption goes unpunished, the only sensible response is to give it a wide berth. Britain should have nothing to do with Fifa and Blatter's "inner family". It should refuse to participate in venue bidding and withdraw from Fifa unless Blatter goes and his organisation is reconstructed. That should be obvious.

      Yet this is unlikely to happen unless a critical mass of nations is prepared to form a rival world body. Britain, the birthplace of football, should be the initiator. At present neither its football authorities nor its craven government has shown the guts. Blatter knows it, and will rely on Britain to continue appeasing his benighted organisation. The only hope is that the World Cup's current extortion of billions of dollars from poor Brazil will bring other members to their senses.

      Meanwhile, we might hear it for the one institution that has had the professional courage to call these monsters to account. That is not governments or regulators or lawyers or sportsmen. It is the old-fashioned British press. It is one World Cup I am proud for Britain to win.
      http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jun/03/fifa-sepp-blatter-britain-football

      Any thoughts on FIFA, the World Cup or even our own FA?

      I think most of us have known for some time that FIFA, if it wasn't already corrupt from the start has certainly gone down that road.
      It would probably be fair to say the same about UEFA, although to a lesser extent.
      The article proposes a solution, but there must surely be others, not least of which is international Agencies having the balls to do something about Blatter.
      His actions amount to criminal conspiracy, but there seems to be no desire by any of the "powers" to do anything about him.

      My greatest concern is that this corruption is ruining the game we love.
      It is no longer a working mans game, and this is partly because of the corruption.
      fishpie
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      Re: Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Reply #1: Jun 05, 2014 06:38:30 am
      Blatter is as big a liar and f**ker as any snide politician. In fact; it's about time he went, Platini shouldn't take over because he's a corrupt f**ker too.
      bmck
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      Re: Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Reply #2: Jun 06, 2014 08:55:21 pm
      Blatter is the ultimate BUFFOON - a pompous, completely arrogant fuckpot.
      I mean, the World Cup in Qatar ! It's F***ing ridiculous. Reeks of corruption, like an open sewer of it running through the game - and what's worse, they get away with it.
      Are they embarrassed by how corrupt it is - F**k no - they're rolling in lolly!
      Great to see the Sunday Times shining a light on it.
      therealjr
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      Re: Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Reply #3: Jun 10, 2014 10:34:27 pm
      I think one of the Mods should close this thread before LFCReds ends up on a charge of Racism!!  >:D
      HUYTON RED
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      Re: Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Reply #4: Jun 11, 2014 02:10:43 pm
      Blatter is as bent as anything, but the FA have got to some F***ing nerve, maybe not as corrupt but definitely as incompetent!
      RedPuppy
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      Re: Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Reply #5: Jun 11, 2014 04:59:58 pm
      I think one of the Mods should close this thread before LFCReds ends up on a charge of Racism!!  >:D




      I would like to know how he perceives the claims to be racist, if you are corrupt, you're corrupt no matter what race you come from.
      Swab
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      Re: Cleanse Fifa of corruption by leaving it, not playing along
      Reply #6: Nov 13, 2014 01:38:31 pm
      FIFA at it again.
      Wankers.
      The findings of Fifa's inquiry into allegations of corruption during bidding for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups have been questioned - by the man who conducted the two-year investigation into the claims.

      In an unexpected twist, lawyer Michael Garcia says the report "contains numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts and conclusions".

      The 42-page report cleared both Russia and Qatar, who will host the 2018 and 2022 tournaments, of wrongdoing.

      It also accused the English Football Association of flouting bid rules and damaging Fifa's image.

      Fifa, the body that governs world football, welcomed the report and said it brought closure to the damaging episode.

       But Garcia's statement, issued less than four hours after the report was published, reopens the debate about the validity of the bidding process for both the 2018 and 2022 competitions.

      It also raises concerns about the work of Hans-Joachim Eckert, Fifa's independent ethics adjudicator, who wrote the report.

      Eckert, a German judge, based his findings on the work of Garcia, who had been appointed by Fifa to conduct an independent investigation into claims of corruption.

      Garcia says he now intends to contact Fifa's appeals committee.

      News of Garcia's attack on its report is likely to come as blow and an embarrassment to Fifa, which has been attempting to address allegations of corruption within its organisation.

      It hoped Eckert's findings would end talk of possible re-votes to decide where the 2018 and 2022 World Cups would be held.

      But there are now calls for Garcia's entire report, which ran into hundreds of pages, to be published in full.

      "Fifa has no choice but to publish Michael Garcia's report in full if it expects anyone to believe their claims that that there has been no cover-up over allegations of corruption in the World Cup bidding process," said British MP Clive Efford, Labour's Shadow Minister for Sport.

      Another British MP, Damien Collins, had already labelled the report "a whitewash" before Garcia's statement was issued.

       Collins has campaigned for Fifa reform and in 2011 used Parliamentary privilege to allege that bribes helped secure Qatar the 2022 tournament.

      He said those allegations remained unanswered.

      "It is a whitewash as it is an attempt to con people that there has been a full and independent investigation when there has not been," he said.

      "The result is that allegations of bribery and serious wrongdoing remain unanswered and they are still suppressing the full report."

      Qatar's bid team has always denied allegations of corruption, while Alexey Sorokin, the chief of Russia's 2018 World Cup organising committee, said the country had nothing to hide.

      "We were always confident that there could be nothing which would come out from this investigation," Sorokin told Sky Sports News.

      "It's something Fifa deemed important to do. It was done, we participated, we complied. What more can we do?"

      Following the publication of the report, the English FA rejected the criticism levelled at it, insisting it had "conducted a transparent bid".

      It was accused of trying to "curry favour" with former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner, who quit his role in 2011 amid bribery allegations.

      An FA statement read: "We do not accept any criticism regarding the integrity of England's bid or any of the individuals involved."

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