The Borneo Post

Africa slams ‘hateful’ British media over graft claims

-

SAO PAULO: African football bosses on Monday slammed the Brit ish media over its Qatar World Cup corruption revelation­s, accusing outlets of waging a “hateful, defamatory and degrading” campaign against the continent.

Britain’s The Sunday Times has published a series of reports in recent weeks alleging that African officials among others were paid bribes to help influence the outcome of the 2022 World Cup vote won by Qatar. Qatar World Cup organisers have angrily denied wrongdoing.

In a strongly worded statement issued after the Confederat­ion of African Football’s (CAF) general assembly in Sao Paulo, the body said the newspaper reports were an attack on “the entire African continent.”

CAF also used the statement to offer staunch support of world football chief Sepp Blatter, who is tipped to announce this week he plans to run for a fifth four-year term as President of FIFA.

“Considerin­g the repeated, deliberate­ly hateful, defamatory and degrading attacks by some media, notably British, on the image and the integrity of the Confederat­ion of African Football, its President, its members, its member associatio­ns and the entire African continent,” the statement said.

CAF railed against “persistent manipulati­on aimed at portraying to the internatio­nal community that Africa played a prepondera­nt role” in vot ing for Qatar’s successful World Cup bid.

“It was done by a majority vote of the FIFA Executive Committee, of which Africa had only three representa­tives over 22 at the time of taking the vote,” it added.

CAF’s general assembly urged the body’s executive committee to take legal action over the reports “so that the authors of this smearing and defamatory campaign against African football leaders are brought to book.” — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia