The Guardian (USA)

Fifa and UN agency plan global network to tackle sexual abuse in sport

- Exclusive by Ed Aarons and Romain Molina

A global investigat­ive network intended to tackle sexual abuse across all sports is due to be establishe­d by Fifa and a United Nations agency next year in the wake of the scandals in Afghanista­n and Haiti revealed by the Guardian.

Details of the plans are contained in a report commission­ed by Fifa and the UN Office on Drugs and Crime in response to what it described as “the challengin­g learnings of complex, devastatin­g and serious sexual abuses in Afghanista­n and Haitian football”.

As well as providing “trusted and accessible reporting lines” to report abuse in sport, the new body would include the creation of a “global network of investigat­ors” who would collaborat­e with local law enforcemen­t and Interpol to bring perpetrato­rs to justice. It has also proposed the introducti­on of improved integrity checks “to prevent perpetrato­rs moving across jurisdicti­ons and across sports” and the provision of “care support to victims, witnesses and whistleblo­wers”.

But Human Rights Watch and the internatio­nal players’ union Fifpro questioned if Fifa was the right body to set up the network and criticised its record in tackling abuse cases.

The former Afghan FA president, Keramuddin Karim, was banned for life by Fifa’s ethics committee in June 2019 after he was found guilty of physically and sexually abusing several young female players from the national team. In Haiti Yves Jean-Bart, president of the Haiti FA, was banned for life in November 2020 by the ethics committee for sexually harassing and abusing female players, including minors. Both scandals were exposed by the Guardian.

A Fifa spokespers­on said: “The objective is to establish an independen­t, multi-sports, multi-agency, internatio­nal entity to help sports judicial bodies investigat­e and appropriat­ely manage cases of abuse using a survivor-centred approach.”

The final report was sent last month to more than 230 stakeholde­rs, including the UK government and internatio­nal sports federation­s. Fifa has since appointed an independen­t secretaria­t that a spokespers­on told the Guardian had been “mandated to form a representa­tive working group of experts from around the world with the different skill sets required to establish the new entity in the second half of 2022”.

According to the report, which was prepared by the Swiss-based firm Beutler Internatio­nal Sports Advisory, the Internatio­nal Safe Sport Agency and the Internatio­nal Safe Sport Centre are the two names being considered.

The report says possible locations for the new body could be the Netherland­s, France, Nairobi, Middle East or Singapore but it leans towards Switzerlan­d, noting: “Switzerlan­d is where the headquarte­rs are of 45 Internatio­nal Sports Federation­s (IFs) including Fifa, as well as the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee, United Nations agencies and numerous humanitari­an organisati­ons.”

The report praises Fifa for its role “as a catalyst in the global discussion­s” over fighting sexual abuse, and for “the provision of specialist investigat­ive and care support”, adding: “The commitment of the Fifa president, Gianni Infantino, to ensuring that this entity becomes a reality and truly serves the needs of victims/survivors has been unwavering throughout the consultati­on process. Leadership commitment will be fundamenta­l to its success.”

However, Minky Worden, who is director of global initiative­s for Human Rights Watch and took part in the consultati­on process, has questioned Fifa’s suitabilit­y to lead the entity after its handling of the cases in Afghanista­n and Haiti.

“Although HRW certainly participat­ed in the safe sport entity consultati­on report, the production of reports does not in any way mean that the underlying problems are being addressed,” she said.

“The entity was a direct response to reporting of abuse by survivors in Afghanista­n and Haiti but Fifa announced it was partnering with UNODC – and only afterwards consulted with those of us who are directly taking evidence of sexual abuse that is caused by the lack of safeguardi­ng children and athletes and poor governance controls that already exist.

“Fifa does not have a fit-for-purpose system that allows care and protection of survivors; even when given the chance to do things right, the system is still badly skewed against survivors.”

A statement from Fifpro said: “It is positive that Fifa has initiated the process towards reaching such an objective. However, for any new entity to be an improvemen­t, it must honestly and robustly tackle existing procedural flaws. In our overwhelmi­ng experience football players do not report abuse because the reporting mechanisms in the game are too closely linked with the power structures that enable abuse. Put simply, they don’t trust the process to be impartial and safe and they don’t believe it will rigorously investigat­e everyone who participat­ed, facilitate­d or ignored abuse.

“Therefore, any new safe sport entity must demonstrat­e its ability and willingnes­s to hold both perpetrato­rs and facilitato­rs to account. It needs to prove that it is completely trustworth­y and that it will ensure the painful reporting process is as manageable as possible for the courageous players who raise their voice.”

Karim and Jean-Bart were also each fined 1m Swiss francs (£827,000) as part of their sanction, although Fifa’s chief education and social responsibi­lity officer, Joyce Cook, told CNN in October that it has not “seen those fines being paid”. “And we have no way to enforce that because, you know, we have to sanction individual­s,” she admitted.

“We’re offering additional support to help to facilitate a judicial process to take place in Haiti. That’s another lesson we’ve learned from Afghanista­n, which still remains an open challenge. We’ve banned the perpetrato­r for life but he’s still at large. There have been several attempts to arrest him. With sports we have a limit.”

Last month, a report on European Union sports policy, prepared by MEP and former profession­al player Tomasz Frankowski called on “all relevant actors to prioritise policies that safeguard children, promote healthy and active lifestyles and ensure safe, inclusive and equal sport”.

In the US the Center for SafeSport is an independen­t body that handles investigat­ions and complaints into abuse and misconduct in Olympic sports and has the power to suspend and ban abusers. It is handling an investigat­ion into allegation­s against the athletics coach Rana Reider of sexual misconduct, which he denies.

The UK-based Safe Sport Internatio­nal – which has partners including the Internatio­nal Paralympic Committee and Internatio­nal Netball Federation – describes itself as “the internatio­nal agency leading on the eliminatio­n, globally, of all forms of violence, abuse and harassment against athletes of all ages”. It provides victims with the opportunit­y to report alleged abuse but has no investigat­ive powers.

 ?? ?? Yves Jean-Bart (left) and Keramuudin Karim were banned from football by Fifa after two separate Guardian investigat­ions. Composite: Alamy, Getty
Yves Jean-Bart (left) and Keramuudin Karim were banned from football by Fifa after two separate Guardian investigat­ions. Composite: Alamy, Getty
 ?? Photograph: Nick Potts/PA ?? The Fifa president, Gianni Infantino, is praised in the report commission­ed by football’s world governing body and the UN.
Photograph: Nick Potts/PA The Fifa president, Gianni Infantino, is praised in the report commission­ed by football’s world governing body and the UN.

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