Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Stung by criticism, Brazil to shun FIFA'S Valcke

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RIO DE JANEIRO, March 3, 2012 (AFP) Brazil Sports Minister Aldo Rebelo said Saturday his country would no longer recognise FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke as a spokesman after he slammed the country's faltering organisati­on of the 2014 World Cup.“the government will no longer accept the secretary general as FIFA spokesman,” Rebelo told a press conference a day after Valcke went so far as to suggest the organisers needed a “kick up the backside.”

A furious Rebelo dubbed Valcke's comments as “impertinen­t,” “inappropri­ate” and “offensive” and said it was difficult to see how they could serve to foster cooperatio­n between Brazil and FIFA.

Rebelo said he intended to contact FIFA president Sepp Blatter and inform him the Brazilians did not wish to engage in further discussion­s with Valcke. “I hope he will understand,” the minister said, quoted by Brazilian media.

Asked if Valcke would be received were he to come to Brazil, Rebelo stated simply: “No.”

Valcke responded by dubbing Rebelo's

I don't understand why things are not moving. The stadiums are not on schedule any more and why are a lot of things late?

reaction “a bit puerile.”

In a FIFA statement made available to AFP he said: “If the result is that they no longer wish to speak to me and that I am no longer the person they wish to work with then I find that a little puerile.

“I will go to Brazil on March 12,” Valcke said in London.

FIFA have for months expressed varying degrees of concern over the extent to which preparatio­ns are on track for the first World Cup in Brazil since 1950.

But Frenchman Valcke pulled no punches on Friday when he said that although there was no danger of Brazil losing the event, he believed progress was much too slow.

“I don't understand why things are not moving. The stadiums are not on schedule any more and why are a lot of things late?” asked Valcke.

“In 2014 we will have a World Cup. The concern is nothing is made or prepared to receive so many people because the world wants to go to Brazil.

“I am sorry to say but things are not working in Brazil. You expect more support – there are these endless discussion­s about the World Cup bill. We should have received these documents signed by 2007 and we are in 2012”, Valcke said.

He also suggested the priority in Brazil was to win the tournament rather than organise a good World Cup.

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