Bangkok Post

Infantino slams ‘fake news’, says Fifa will ‘never again’ be hit by big-scale corruption

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>> MANAMA: Gianni Infantino slammed “fake news” and “alternativ­e facts” surroundin­g Fifa and insisted football’s scandal-ridden governing body had changed in an impassione­d speech to its annual congress in Bahrain on Thursday.

Fifteen months after being elected as president to bring forward wholesale change to a disgraced organisati­on, Infantino also claimed Fifa’s corruption crisis was over and would never happen again.

Despite this, the main controvers­y surroundin­g Fifa this week has been the decision to remove the two men responsibl­e for rooting out corruption in the game — Hans-Joachim Eckert and Cornel Borbely.

Congress backed the recommenda­tion of the all-powerful Fifa Council, chaired by Infantino, to replace them with the former president of the European Court of Justice Vassilios Skouris of Greece and Colombia’s Maria Claudia Rojas.

But Infantino denied this had put back any anti-corruption agenda.

“Fifa has changed now, this is a new Fifa and we are new people here and we act with facts, not with words,” he told Congress.

Infantino then invoked American President Donald Trump: “Fake news, alternativ­e facts, these terms did not exist until some time ago, they have become en vogue.

“There’s a lot of fake news and alternativ­e facts about Fifa circulatin­g — Fifa-bashing has become a national sport, especially in some countries.”

Asked afterwards to give an example of fake news, Infantino responded: “Generally, it’s my feeling.”

And he said it was not the media but “a lot of people spreading the wrong informatio­n”.

Alternatin­g between English, French, German and Spanish, the Fifa president said his organisati­on was now different and would “nunca mas — never again” be hit by widescale corruption.

Infantino, whose critics maintain he has not shown a real commitment to reform, also told those who wanted to enrich themselves through football to leave Fifa.

“If there is anyone in this room or outside of this room who still thinks he can enrich himself, he can abuse football, I have one clear and strong message to tell him: leave, leave football and leave football now,” added Infantino.

Getting into his stride, he also reaffirmed his belief that Fifa’s finances were healthy, saying: “We don’t have to bullshit with alternativ­e figures.”

Infantino also criticised unnamed “highly-paid experts” who did little to help reform, and rubber-stamped “a sick and wrong system”.

The decision to replace Eckert and Borbely caught the headlines earlier in the week, but there was no controvers­y inside the Congress hall where delegates backed the proposal with 97 percent of the votes.

Congress, meanwhile, hinted that there could potentiall­y be new regulation­s placed on transfers following news earlier this week that Fifa is investigat­ing the £89.3 million (US$111 million, €105.2 million) transfer of Paul Pogba to Manchester United from Juventus.

 ??  ?? Fifa president Gianni Infantino speaks during the organisati­on’s congress in Manama on Thursday.
Fifa president Gianni Infantino speaks during the organisati­on’s congress in Manama on Thursday.

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