Saturday Star

Why Platini pulled out of race for Fifa hot seat …

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ZURICH: Banned European soccer boss Michel Platini has withdrawn his candidacy from the race for the presidency of scandal-plagued Fifa, he told French sports daily L’Equipe.

Platini, the head of Uefa, was handed an eight-year ban from the game along with outgoing Fifa president Sepp Blatter by the federation’s independen­t Ethics Committee on December 21.

Both have been engulfed by the worst corruption scandal in Fifa’s history as the sport faces criminal investigat­ions in Switzerlan­d and the US, where 41 soccer officials and sports entities have been indicted on corruption-related charges.

Former French inter national Platini has insisted he has done nothing wrong and was still hoping to win an appeal in time to have been allowed back in time for the election on February 26, but said he had changed his mind.

“I withdraw my candidacy. I can no longer (go through with it). I have neither the time, nor the means to go and see the voters, to meet people, and to fight with others,” he said in an interview which L’Equipe published on its website.

“By withdrawin­g, I chose to fully focus on my defence.

“It’s a matter of schedule, but it’s not just that. How do you win an election when you’re prevented from campaignin­g?”

Blatter and Platini were both banned over a payment of 2 million Swiss francs (R31.84 million) made to the Frenchman by Fifa with Blatter’s approval in 2011 for work done a decade earlier.

The committee said the payment, made at a time when Blatter was seeking reelection, lacked transparen­cy and presented conflicts of interest, though both men denied wrongdoing.

Platini had initially been seen as the favourite to re- place Blatter in the February 26 election where each of 209 national football associatio­ns who are members of Fifa hold one vote.

“I had… about hundred official letters of support from federation­s and about 50 pledges, in two days,” Platini said.

Five candidates, none of them clear favourites, will take part in the election and a chance for the job of rebuilding the sport’s beleaguere­d governing body.

They are Prince Ali Bin Al Hussein of Jordan, Asian Football Confederat­ion president Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa of Bah- rain, former French diplomat and Fifa official Jerome Champagne, Uefa general secretary Gianni Infantino of Switzerlan­d and South African businessma­n Tokyo Sexwale.

Infantino has been Platini’s right-hand man at Uefa and announced his candidacy after the Frenchman had been initially suspended in October.

Champagne, although a compatriot of Platini, is known to be a critic, has no connection­s with Uefa and says that Fifa’s priority must be to spread the game’s riches more evenly around the world. – Reuters

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