Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

The ‘disloyal payment’ that brought down football powers

- Agence France-Presse

Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini met their downfall with a mysterious two million Swiss francs (`6.6 core) transfer in 2011 from the Fifa president to his deputy. Swiss prosecutor­s say it was a “disloyal payment” and have placed veteran football powerbroke­r Blatter under investigat­ion.

Blatter and his ally-turned-archrival Platini — both banned for eight years by Fifa on Monday — have twisted themselves in knots trying to explain the 2011 transfer.

Unless they make successful appeals, the cash has destroyed two glittering sporting careers.

Blatter has said that from 1999 — after he had secured the Fifa presidency — until 2002, Platini was a consultant to the world body.

The Frenchman was at the time considered a Blatter protege.

Platini told Le Monde about his talks with Blatter, who had asked “how much do you want?” “I answered: ‘one million’. “In what? Whatever you want -- rubles, pounds, dollars,” Platini quoted Blatter as saying.

“At this time there was not yet the euro. He (Blatter) answered: ‘OK one million Swiss francs’.”

Platini told AFP in September that Blatter had informed him “that it was not initially possible to pay the totality of my salary because of Fifa’s financial situation at that time”.

He added: “I did not actively pursue it. I even put the matter to

I am not ashamed. I am sorry that I am a punching ball. I am sorry for football... I am now suspended eight years, suspended eight years. Suspended eight years for what? I am back, I am back, I am doing better (after health scare). I have the support of my daughter...I have never cheated with money. Even if I am suspended, I am still the president.

the side for a while, before finally requesting that the outstandin­g balance was paid in 2011.”

Two million Swiss francs was finally paid a few weeks before Blatter was reelected to a fourth term in 2011. Platini backed Blatter, who had faced opposition, at the election on the understand­ing it would be his last term -- The Swiss official allegedly promised Platini it would be. Platini has said the fact the payment was made close to the election is “irrelevant”.

Blatter and Platini have each said there was an oral contract for the payment and insist this is legal under Swiss law and Fifa regulation­s. This was rejected by the Fifa ethics court in their ruling. It said the payment had “no legal basis in the written agreement signed between” Blatter and Platini in August 1999.

Blatter has also been made a suspect for “criminal mismanagem­ent” by Swiss prosecutor­s and Platini has been questioned over a role described as between a witness and a suspect. Fifa’s ethics commission temporaril­y suspended both for 90 days in October.

It had turned against the president who set up the commission in a bid to improve Fifa’s image and dealt a blow to Platini’s hopes of becoming Fifa president when Blatter officially stands down on February 26.

Fifa officials have raised strong doubts about the cash transfer.

“Based on my knowledge, there was no written contract regulating the payment of two million Swiss francs,” Domenico Scala, head of Fifa’s audit commission told the Financial Times in October.

“In any normal business, there would be a written contract.”

Scala said it was even more serious that there was an apparent “conflict of interest” because the deal involved two top Fifa executive members and because the money owed is not mentioned until it was paid in 2011.

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