Bangkok Post

Russia and Qatar may lose World Cups

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ZURICH: Russia and Qatar could lose the right to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups if evidence is found of corruption in the bidding process, a Fifa official was quoted as saying on Sunday.

The comments by the head of Fifa’s auditing and compliance committee came as bribery claims mounted against disgraced former Fifa vice president Jack Warner, the man at the heart of the scandal engulfing football’s world body.

“If evidence exists that Qatar and Russia received the [World Cup] awards only thanks to bribes, then the awards could be annulled,” Domenico Scala told the Swiss newspaper Sonntagsze­itung.

He said however that “this evidence has not been provided” so far.

His comments are the first by a senior Fifa official to even open up the possibilit­y that either Russia or Qatar could be stripped of the right to host the football extravagan­za.

Swiss judicial authoritie­s are already probing the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar as part of a far-reaching corruption scandal that has also raised questions about the 2010 event in South Africa.

Around 14 current or former Fifa officials and sports marketing executives are also accused by US prosecutor­s of taking part in a sweeping kickbacks scheme going back 20 years involving a total of $150 million in bribes.

The revelation­s have thrown the world of football into turmoil and led to the resignatio­n of long-serving Fifa president Sepp Blatter last week, just four days after his reelection for a fifth successive term.

Blatter’s replacemen­t will not be chosen for months, but Freddy Rumo, a former vice-president of European football’s governing body Uefa, has said that changing Fifa presidents will not root out graft at the organisati­on.

“The corruption, in my opinion, has nothing to do with Blatter’s person,” he told Swiss public broadcaste­r RTS.

“The solution of replacing a president with another will have basically zero effect”. afp

Although Blatter has not been charged and has denied any wrongdoing, allegation­s are swirling around his one-time right-hand man Warner.

Accusation­s surfaced on Sunday that Warner sought a US$7 million bribe from Egypt for votes in the bidding process for the 2010 World Cup, and that he pocketed a $10 million payment from South Africa — the eventual host.

Warner was arrested on May 29 at the request of US authoritie­s and is currently free on $400,000 bail pending a decision in his extraditio­n case.

The 72-year-old former schoolteac­her and Trinidadia­n justice minister has denied all the allegation­s against him.

South Africa on Sunday “categorica­lly” denied it paid bribes to secure the World Cup — the first in Africa and one of Blatter’s main pledges when he took over as Fifa president in 1998.

The former chief of France’s 1998 World Cup organising committee last week also denied any “irregulari­ties” over their bid.

 ?? EPA ?? Domenico Scala, Fifa chairman of the audit and compliance committee.
EPA Domenico Scala, Fifa chairman of the audit and compliance committee.

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