Arab Times

Blatter ‘answers’ corruption charges before FIFA judges

Swiss agree help in German WC case

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ZURICH, Dec 17, (AFP): Suspended FIFA president Sepp Blatter appeared before the world body’s ethics judges Thursday to answer corruption allegation­s as Switzerlan­d announced it has frozen tens of millions of dollars in accounts linked to football bribes.

Blatter, who with vice president Michel Platini faces a long suspension, arrived at FIFA’s base in Zurich in a black Mercedes with his lawyer. He made no comment as he entered.

Before the hearing, Blatter, 79, wrote a letter to FIFA’s 209 members calling the FIFA ethics commission’s investigat­ors “the inquisitio­n”.

As the hearing went ahead, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin, whose country will host the 2018 World Cup, said Blatter should be a Nobel Peace laureate.

“That is someone who should be given the Nobel Peace Prize,” Putin said. “His contributi­on to the global humanitari­an sphere is colossal.”

Blatter is under criminal investigat­ion in Switzerlan­d over a two million Swiss francs ($2 million/1.8 million euros) payment made to Platini in 2011 for work carried out about a decade earlier.

Platini’s case will be heard on Friday, but he has said he will boycott the tribunal. His lawyers will go however.

Platini has said the verdict has been decided in advance and his lawyers say FIFA’s ethics committee has recommende­d a life ban for the French football legend.

Blatter and Platini deny any misconduct.

The ethics committee chamber is expected to announce its verdict next Monday. Appeals to a FIFA appeal committee and the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport are then possible.

FIFA has been plunged into several corruption scandals this year, which played a key role in Blatter’s announceme­nt in June that he would stand down when a new election is held in February.

Platini was considered favourite to take over but his campaign has been frozen since he and Blatter were suspended in October over the payment which they insist was legal.

The United States asked Switzerlan­d to freeze about 50 accounts in Swiss banks linked to its massive inquiry into football corruption, a federal prosecutio­n spokesman told AFP.

Blatter

Federal justice spokesman Folco Galli said “funds in the high tens of millions (Swiss francs) are blocked.”

The Tages Anzeiger newspapere said the figure was between 50 million and 100 million Swiss francs ($50-100 million/46-92 million euros). Galli declined to comment on the total.

The action involved about 50 accounts in 10 Swiss banks. Numerous FIFA members are known to have accounts in the country.

Nicolas Leoz, a longtime head of the South American confederat­ion, CONMEBOL, had 12 accounts in Switzerlan­d, the Swiss television programme Eco said, quoting details from the US request.

The United States has charged 39 individual­s, including Leoz, and two companies over bribes of more than $200 million paid for football marketing and television

Switzerlan­d has agreed to help the Frankfurt public prosecutor investigat­e possible corruption in the awarding of the 2006 World Cup to Germany.

“The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerlan­d can confirm it received a request for mutual judicial aid in this context,”

a spokeswoma­n for the Swiss public prosecutor, told AFP on Wednesday.

“The request will be treated as a priority.”

The request relates to claims made by Der Spiegel magazine in October that Germany had paid 6.7 million euros ($7.4 million) to FIFA to buy votes that allowed it to

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