More news has arrived in the FIFA corruption scandal on Wednesday, as Reuters news agency is reporting that the FBI are indeed investigating the allocation of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch wouldn’t comment on the FBI’s ongoing investigation into FIFA on a trip to Latvia on Wednesday -- or whether or not Blatter was now involved in it -- but she did comment on the Swiss authorities looking into alleged corruption during the allocation of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
“The Swiss authorities do have an investigation underway and their investigation covers matters involving the World Cup awarding for 2018 and 2022, and beyond that I am not able to comment,” Lynch said from the Latvian capital of Riga.
However this new piece of news from Reuters will change things drastically -- the FBI had yet to confirm if it was looking into the bidding process -- in what has been a traumatic few days for world soccer’s governing body.
With Sepp Blatter announcing he will resign in sensational fashion in Zurich on Tuesday, world soccer’s governing is close to ruins. A new leader will be elected in the next 6-9 months after an extraordinary congress was called by Blatter to decide his successor, just five days after being re-elected for a fifth-straight four year term. Blatter’s 17-year reign as FIFA’s leader will come to an end between December this year and March 2016 but so many questions are cropping up over why he is to resign later this year.
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There is much to sort out between now and then.
In his hastily-arranged resignation speech the 79-year-old leader of world soccer’s governing body said that despite his re-election last Friday “I do not feel that I have a mandate from the entire world of football – the fans, the players, the clubs, the people who live, breathe and love football.”
With separate reports suggesting that Blatter is under investigation by the FBI, plus his secretary general Jerome Valcke accused of being involved in the distribution of an allegedly corrupt $10 million payment in 2008, the corruption allegations from the FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice seems to be getting a lot closer to Blatter by the day.
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Given all of that and the reports regarding the FBI “scrutinizing” the Russia and Qatar World Cup bids, it begs this important question. Are the 2018 and 2022 World Cups in serious jeopardy of taking place?
The chairman of the English Football Association, Greg Dyke, believes there should be a new investigation into how those hosts were picked after FIFA’s own ethics committee ruled out any wrongdoing by either Russia or Qatar in December 2014. Their report was conducted by American lawyer Michael Garcia and although his full report will not be published, the leader of FIFA’s ethics committee released a summary of the report which Garcia rejected as it “contains numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts and conclusions.”
Plus, if the new leader of FIFA wishes to open an investigation into the World Cup allocation, we have a whole new ball game.
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Dyke, who has led the anti-Qatar drive from the English FA who lost out to Russia for the 2018 World Cup bid, said this after hearing about Blatter’s resignation.
Qatar’s football association hit back at Dyke’s comments and had the following to say.
“Mr Dyke’s instinct to immediately focus on stripping Qatar of the World Cup speaks volumes on his views concerning what will be the first FIFA World Cup to take place in the Middle East,” said the Qatari FA in a statement. “Having already co-operated fully with Mr. Garcia’s investigation -- and been subsequently cleared of any wrong-doing -- we welcome the Office of the Swiss Attorney General conducting its own work into the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. We would urge Mr Dyke to let the legal process take its course and concentrate on delivering his promise to build an England team capable of winning the 2022 FIFA World Cup in Qatar.”
Anybody get the sense that Qatar’s getting a bit touchy? When news of Blatter’s resignation broke on Tuesday Qatar’s stock-market plummeted by $45 billion, almost three percent of its total value, before rallying. As for Russia 2018, that seems more likely to go ahead as qualifying for the tournament has already began and we are three years from kick off compared to less than seven in Qatar’s case.
Frank Lowy, head of Football Federation Australia, has called for a new investigation into the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups after his nation gained just one vote for the 2022 World Cup and lost out to Qatar. Australia have since been alleged to have paid a donation to CONCACAF but Lowy insists that was for legitimate reasons.
“We ran a clean bid,” Lowy said. “I know that others did not, and I have shared what I know with the authorities, including Michael Garcia who undertook a two-year investigation into the 2022 World Cup bid.”
With growing pressure from various associations and regional governing bodies around the globe to look into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids once again, there are a busy times ahead at FIFA to sort out this mess.
If the Swiss investigation or reported FBI scrutiny finds something incriminating in one or both of the bids from Russia and Qatar, a re-vote needs to happen. Fast. Who knows how long these separate investigations will take and if anything comes of it in terms of the allocation process, but both Russia and Qatar will not be welcoming more scrutiny surrounding their World Cup bids.
Conspiracy theorists are now claiming that the reason the U.S. Department of Justice brought down the hammer on FIFA was that the USA would be one of the countries at the top of the list to host a hastily re-arranged World Cup if either Qatar or Russia lost their rights. Germany and England would also be at the top of that list but for now, the World Cups in Russia and Qatar are going ahead as planned.
But in the crazy world of FIFA, and as the last few days have proven, stranger things have happened...