Sunday Times

Safa letter could hold key to $10m bribe claim

Scramble to defend SA’s name as Fifa scandal erupts

- MNINAWA NTLOKO, MARVIN MEINTJIES in Zurich, ANDRÉ JURGENS, BARENG BATHO-KORTJAAS and THANDUXOLO JIKA

A LETTER sent from South Africa to Fifa headquarte­rs “instructin­g” the world’s soccer body to pay $10-million to a Caribbean football union holds the key to the FBI’s sensationa­l claim that South Africa bought the right to host the 2010 World Cup.

The Sunday Times has had sight of the letter, dated March 2008, and signed by then South African Football Associatio­n president Molefi Oliphant.

In it Oliphant tells Fifa to pay over the money — about R120-million at today’s rates — to the Caribbean Football Union.

Oliphant, contacted for comment yesterday, initially wanted to know who had given the letter to the Sunday Times.

He asked that he be called back in 30 minutes as he had just arrived from Zurich and was going into a meeting. After being contacted a second time via SMS, Oliphant called back saying: “It is difficult for me to comment over the phone.” He promised to call back to arrange a meeting but never did.

A Safa insider said the money was intended for a developmen­t plan in the Caribbean that had the backing of South Africa at the time.

The latest internatio­nal Fifa scandal was triggered after Swiss police discreetly raided the five-star Baur au Lac hotel in Zurich at 6am on Wednesday and arrested seven soccer executives ahead of Fifa’s annual meeting in the Swiss city.

The scandal went public within hours as the US Justice Department released a 47-count indictment charging several Fifa officials with racketeeri­ng, wire fraud and moneylaund­ering conspiraci­es, among other offences, for allegedly taking part in a “24-year scheme to enrich themselves through the corruption of internatio­nal soccer”.

Swiss prosecutor­s simultaneo­usly announced a second probe into the bidding process for the 2018 World Cup in Russia and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar.

The US attorney-general, Loretta Lynch, alleged on Wednesday that “high-ranking South African officials” offered a $10-million bribe to help secure the hosting rights for the global showpiece. A second claim was made that a senior South African official had paid a bribe to a relative of former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner at a French hotel. Two South Africans were designated as “co-conspirato­r #15 and #16”.

Her indictment states that in the months before South Africa clinched the hosting rights, Warner claimed that Fifa officials, the South African government and its bid committee were willing to arrange for the country to pay $10-million to the CFU.

The document states that the South Africans were unable to arrange payment directly from government funds.

Arrangemen­ts were then made with Fifa officials to instead have the $10-million sent from Fifa — using funds that would otherwise have gone to South Africa to help fund the World Cup.

“In fact, on January 2 2008, January 31 2008 and March 7 2008, a high-ranking Fifa official caused

That’s rubbish, I dismiss it with the contempt it deserves. The other money, the $10-million, that, too, is complete rubbish

payments of $616 000, $1 600 000, and $7 784 000 — totalling $10-million — to be wired from a Fifa account,” states the indictment.

It went into bank accounts held in the name of CFU and the Confederat­ion of North, Central American and Caribbean Associatio­n Football controlled by Warner.

Warner, the document states, diverted a substantia­l portion of that money for his personal use.

The South African letter was sent three days before the final payment by Fifa was made on March 7. It is unclear if there were other letters authorisin­g the previous two payments to the CFU.

Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula, asked whether the FBI were not confusing the $10-million CFU payment with bribe claims, said: “I am not going to go there, I know where you’re going. I have no comment on that. We shall wait for the indictment and are not going to jump to conclusion­s about anything.”

Safa president Danny Jordaan, who cancelled his trip to Zurich on the advice of Luthuli House for political reasons on Thursday, said: “Nobody told me I’m conspirato­r whatever number. No one spoke to me. I don’t know anything about that [except] what I read.

“The so-called money in Paris? That’s rubbish, I dismiss it with the contempt it deserves. The other money, the $10-million, that, too, is complete rubbish and we will deal with this matter.”

He said he had no idea why the allegation­s were being made.

Jordaan was CEO of South Africa’s local organising committee for both the 2006 and 2010 World Cup bids. He said yesterday that he was bound by regulation­s during his time as CEO of the LOC and could not authorise payments of more than R2.5-million.

On Friday in Zurich, Sepp Blatter was re-elected Fifa president and Irvin Khoza, soccer’s “Iron Duke”, cast South Africa’s vote at the Hallenstad­ion. Khoza was chairman of the 2006 and 2010 bid committees and LOC.

Several former LOC and bid committee members expressed outrage and surprise about the bribery claims.

Tokyo Sexwale, the third man some have tried to put into the frame, was also in Zurich.

Asked about the FBI’s approach in this investigat­ion, Sexwale said: “It’s important that they should state fully in the public domain what it is they are looking for, instead of releasing whatever informatio­n they have piecemeal. It’s unfair of them to do that to South Africa and also not having approached government properly.

“My reading of the situation is that there was not even an attempt to consult the government and people are talking about government money.

“But it is most important that people who are innocent must not be dragged into this.”

Sexwale said 2010 was “one of the cleanest World Cups”.

Former sports minister Makhenkesi Stofile said he only got involved in the organising of the 2010 World Cup when he became a minister in 2004 and had no knowledge of the bidding process, which was eight years earlier.

“This thing of these scandals is nothing new. Maybe there was an issue of bribes, but that wouldn’t be anything new because Fifa is an organisati­on filled with corruption and bribes. But we must not forget that it was important for South Africa to host that tournament and important for the continent as a whole.

“Anyway, the only people who have full knowledge about the whole thing [World Cup bid] was Danny Jordaan, Irvin Khoza and Molefi Oliphant,” said Stofile.

Khoza has not spoken since the scandal broke. Repeated attempts to reach him were unsuccessf­ul.

Former Safa vice-president Chief Mwelo Nonkonyana said: “I won’t know a lot, but people who were pivotal in it was Danny Jordaan, chairman of the committee Dr Irvin Khoza and to some extent Oliphant as the president of Safa then. They are the only ones who can shed some light on that thing.”

Former finance minister Trevor Manuel was offended by the bribery allegation­s.

“I am not aware of any request for a bribe of any size. For the 20 years I served as a cabinet minister, 13 of which was as finance minister, I can say without fear of contradict­ion that no person ever approached me for a bribe; nor, as it happens, did I ever approach any individual or company for any bribe,” he said.

Manuel, who was finance minister at the time, did not serve on the bid committee or LOC.

Maybe there was an issue of bribes, but that wouldn’t be anything new because Fifa is an organisati­on filled with corruption and bribes

It now appears as if a stand-off between the South African government and the US is brewing, with South African officials questionin­g the manner in which the country was dragged into the Fifa scandal.

It appears that both the government and local law enforcemen­t agencies were kept in the dark about the FBI investigat­ion.

Asked whether the FBI has contacted authoritie­s in South Africa, Mbalula said: “At the moment there hasn’t been any contact. I’ve never heard of a state investigat­ing another state without following protocols.”

On Friday, the South African government scrambled to do damage control and all queries were diverted to Mbalula.

Continued on Page 6

 ?? Picture: EPA ?? WINNING BID: The South African delegation of Irvin Khoza, Danny Jordaan and Nelson Mandela, with Fifa president Sepp Blatter and Molefi Oliphant show the name of South Africa at the announceme­nt that the country would host the 2010 Soccer World Cup,...
Picture: EPA WINNING BID: The South African delegation of Irvin Khoza, Danny Jordaan and Nelson Mandela, with Fifa president Sepp Blatter and Molefi Oliphant show the name of South Africa at the announceme­nt that the country would host the 2010 Soccer World Cup,...

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