FIFA President Sepp
Blatter has questions to answer over a bribery scandal that has
further damaged the image of world football's governing body, a
group of European politicians said on Friday.
A Swiss prosecutor said in a legal document released this
week that former FIFA president Joao Havelange and former
executive committee member Ricardo Teixeira took multi-million
bribes on World Cup deals in the 1990s.
Blatter, who has been with FIFA since 1975, and succeeded
Havelange as president in 1998, said on Thursday he knew that
payments were being made. He referred to them as "commission"
and said they were not illegal at the time.
Politicians from the parliamentary arm of the 47-nation
Council of Europe condemned FIFA for trying to hush up the
affair.
"If FIFA managers - including its current President - were
aware of these bribes, they should have been doing everything in
their power to prosecute, rather than protect, the officials
concerned," French politician Francois Rochebloine said.
He urged Blatter to come clean on his role in a scandal that
occurred when he was FIFA General Secretary.
"When exactly did he become aware of these payments? Why did
FIFA hide wrongdoing and fail to take action against its
perpetrators? Above all, what steps will he now take to stop
this happening again?," he added.
TAX DEDUCTIBLE
Asked in a question-and-answer session with FIFA's own
website on Thursday if he had known of payments, Blatter
replied: "Known what? That commission was paid? Back then, such
payments could even be deducted from tax as a business expense.
"Today, that would be punishable under law. You can't judge
the past on the basis of today's standards."
Brazilian Havelange, who recently celebrated his 96th
birthday, was head of FIFA from 1974 to 1998. He received a
payment of 1.5 million Swiss francs ($1.53 million) in March
1997 from now-defunct sports marketing body ISL, the Swiss
prosecutor said.
Teixeira, 65, who led the Brazilian Football Confederation
(CBF) from 1989 until stepping down earlier this year, took 12.7
million francs between 1992 and 1997, the prosecutor said.
ISL sold the commercial rights to broadcast World Cup
competitions on behalf of FIFA. It collapsed with debts of
around $300 million in 2001.
Blatter, who has been president for 14 years since
succeeding Havelange, said FIFA had reacted by "strengthening
our control mechanisms."
"The ethics committee, which was created in 2006 on my
initiative, is a direct result of the ISL case," he said. "The
reform process is moving exactly in this direction.
"To strengthen FIFA's judicial system, some important steps
have already been taken with the introduction of a two-chamber
system - an adjudicatory body and an investigatory body. The
executive committee will appoint the chairmen of these two
chambers next week."
Havelange is still FIFA's honorary president while Teixeira
quit his post earlier this year, shortly after resigning as
president of the Brazilian Football Confederation (CBF).
"I don't have the power to call him to account," said
Blatter of Havelange. "The Congress named him as Honorary
President. Only the Congress can decide his future."
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