The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Calls for Fifa to see evidence of Qatar ‘sabotage’

Smear claims over bid for 2022 World Cup Informer says EX-CIA agents spread falsehoods

- By Jamie Merrill and Ben Rumsby

Members of Fifa’s ruling council want the football body’s ethics committee to demand the evidence behind allegation­s that the Qatar 2022 World Cup bid ran a secret campaign to sabotage their rivals for the tournament.

The Sunday Times reported yesterday that it had been passed documents by a whistleblo­wer who worked with the Qatar bid.

It reported claims that the bid team used a PR agency and former CIA operatives to disseminat­e fake propaganda about its main competitor­s, the United States and Australia, in a flagrant breach of the rules set down for bidding countries by football’s world governing body.

Qatar beat rival bids from the US, Australia, South Korea and Japan eight years ago to win the right to host the competitio­n, and has faced questions over its shock win since.

The alleged smears against rival bidders reportedly involved recruiting prominent figures to criticise the bids in their own countries, thus giving the impression they lacked support at home.

The Daily Telegraph contacted members of Fifa’s ruling council for comment on the story. More than one said the governing body or its quasi-independen­t ethics committee should ask to see evidence of the newspaper’s claims, amid calls in Westminste­r for an “independen­t investigat­ion” into the allegation­s.

The officials, none of whom wished to be identified, predicted that the latest allegation­s would not lead to Qatar being stripped of the World Cup, but they have placed renewed focus on the lengths the wealthy Gulf state may have gone to in its efforts to secure the competitio­n.

According to The Sunday Times, the smear campaign included paying a professor £6,900 to write a damning report on the economic cost of a World Cup in the US.

Journalist­s, bloggers and highprofil­e figures were recruited in each country to build up concerns over the respective bids, the paper reported. It also claimed that grassroots protests against Australia’s bid were organised at rugby games there, while intelligen­ce reports were compiled on key individual­s involved in rival bids.

Fifa rules say that bidders must “refrain from making any written or oral statements of any kind, whether adverse or otherwise, about the bids or candidatur­es of any other member associatio­n which has expressed an interest in hosting the competitio­n”.

Qatar said it “rejected” all the claims made by the newspaper.

The alleged smear campaign appears to have been aimed at exploiting a key Fifa criterion that bids to host the World Cup should have strong public backing back home.

The strategy was reportedly carried out by New York communicat­ions firm Brown Lloyd Jones, which is now BLJ Worldwide, in addition to a team of former CIA agents used to help disseminat­e propaganda against Qatar’s rivals.

One of the leaked emails, seen by The Sunday Times, and sent to Qatar’s deputy bid leader Ali al-thawadi, shows that the Gulf state was aware of a plot to spread “poison” against its chief rivals.

The leaked documents also revealed that a group of American PE teachers had been recruited to ask Congressme­n to oppose a US World Cup on the grounds the money would be better spent on highschool sports, the paper claimed.

Lord Triesman, former chairman of the Football Associatio­n and England bid chairman, urged Fifa to “look at the evidence thoroughly”, and said Qatar should not be allowed to “hold on to the World Cup” if it were shown to have broken Fifa rules. He told the newspaper: “I think it would not be wrong for Fifa to reconsider England in those circumstan­ces. We have the capabiliti­es.”

Last month the whistleblo­wer behind the leaked documents gave testimony to Damian Collins MP, chairman of the culture, media and sport select committee. Collins told BBC Radio 5 Live that the allegation­s required a “proper independen­t investigat­ion and Fifa should make sure that happens”.

He added: “If the Qataris have broken the rules, they should face some sanctions.”

Qatar was previously investigat­ed by Fifa over allegation­s of corruption surroundin­g the World Cup bid, but was cleared in 2014 following a two-year inquiry led by American lawyer Michael Garcia. He said that “for the most part the bidding process was fair and thorough”, despite certain “questionab­le conduct”. It appears that the documents seen by The Sunday Times were not available during Fifa’s inquiry.

The Qatar bid team has previously been accused of corruption, but was cleared after a two-year inquiry by the Fifa ethics committee.

In a statement, Qatar’s supreme committee for delivery and legacy said: “The supreme committee rejects each and every allegation put forward by The Sunday Times.

“We have been thoroughly investigat­ed and have been forthcomin­g with all informatio­n related to our bid, including the official investigat­ion led by US attorney Michael Garcia.

‘‘We have strictly adhered to all Fifa’s rules for the 2018/2022 World Cup bidding process.”

 ??  ?? Grounds for suspicion: Fireworks spell out 2022 for the Qatar World Cup at the Khalifa Stadium opening in Doha last year
Grounds for suspicion: Fireworks spell out 2022 for the Qatar World Cup at the Khalifa Stadium opening in Doha last year

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