Fifa rejects ban appeals from duo
ZURICH: A Fifa appeal committee yesterday rejected a bid by long-time president Sepp Blatter and Uefa chief Michel Platini to overturn their 90-day suspensions while Swiss police pursue a criminal investigation.
The committee said it had “rejected in full” the appeals made by Blatter and Platini.
Both were suspended for 90 days on Oct 7 after Swiss prosecutors launched a “criminal mismanagement” inquiry against Blatter who made a US$2 million payment to Platini in 2011 for work carried out a decade earlier.
The suspension has been a severe blow to Platini’s hopes of winning a Fifa presidential election in Zurich on Feb 26 when Blatter stands down after 17 years in the post.
The sanction, banning him from all footballrelated activity, means that he is unable to campaign in the Fifa presidential race against the five confirmed candidates, who have already passed the required integrity tests.
Platini will now appeal his suspension at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), his lawyers said.
Platini’s lawyers had already said that their client was “astounded” at how slow the process was for Fifa to decide on his appeal against the suspension.
Platini’s suspension triggered a flurry of activity with the powerful Asian football chief Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa, Prince Ali Al Hussein, former Fifa official Jerome Champagne, South African anti-apartheid campaigner Tokyo Sexwale and Uefa general secretary Gianni Infantino all throwing their hats into the ring.
The race is likely to be heavily shaped by whether the former France and Juventus midfield star is ultimately admitted, with Infantino indicating he would stand aside if his Uefa boss qualifies for the vote.
But the rejection of the appeal means that, barring a successful approach to the CAS, everyone involved will have to wait until Jan 5 when the 90-day bans ends.