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FIFA president Sepp Blatter on Thursday faced angry demands to step down after US indictments and the dawn arrests of top officials engulfed world football in the biggest crisis yet of his 17- year reign.
Global resentment against Blatter to step down post FIFA corruption scandal
FIFA president Sepp Blatter on Thursday faced angry demands to step down after US indictments and the dawn arrests of top officials engulfed world football in the biggest crisis yet of his 17-year reign.
Stunned by the arrests of senior FIFA figures, top sponsors who pour millions into world football, including Coca-Cola, Adidas, McDonald's and Visa, pressed the global body to clean itself up. Visa said that unless FIFA rebuilds its culture with "strong ethical practices" at its heart, "we have informed them that we will reassess our sponsorship".
FIFA was adamant that despite the arrests early Wednesday of the seven officials in a luxury Zurich hotel, its annual congress and leadership vote would go ahead as planned this week. But leading figures in the global game, as well as newspapers around the world, said such a stand was untenable after US prosecutors said their investigation had unearthed the "World Cup of fraud".
US authorities said nine football officials were among 14 people facing up to 20 years in jail if found guilty in the long-running corruption case involving more than $150 million in bribes.
The US investigation said South African officials paid $10 million in bribes to host the 2010 tournament, while Swiss investigators raided FIFA's Zurich headquarters as part of an investigation into the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.
"Sepp Blatter has to go as FIFA president," said Greg Dyke, chairman of the English Football Association, which lost out to Russia for the 2018 tournament amid allegations of bribery in the bidding process.
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"There is no way of rebuilding trust in FIFA while Sepp Blatter is still there... He either has to go through a resignation, or he has to be out-voted or we have to find a third way," Dyke said. 'I hope Blatter will be detained European federations called for the suspension of the FIFA congress due to start Thursday and Friday's presidential vote, in which Blatter was expected to ease to a fifth term, to be put back by six months.
"These events show, once again, that corruption is deeply rooted in FIFA's culture," the European governing body UEFA said in a statement. Former Brazil star turned senator Romario, a vociferous critic of corruption in the game, said he hoped the investigations would stymie Blatter's hopes of re-election, and called for a "worthy" leader.
"I hope this will change something as there is the hope, at least for me, that Blatter may also be detained," he said. The FIFA president was not among those named in the US indictment.
US officials would not be drawn on the possibility of future charges against other senior FIFA figures, and pointedly refused to answer questions about Blatter himself. "It's a significant step but I want to be very clear, this is the beginning of our effort not the end," said Kelly Currie, acting US attorney for the eastern district of New York.
Blatter, 79, said it was a "difficult time" for the world body, and said he would not tolerate misconduct after the investigation named top officials including former FIFA vice-president Jack Warner. "Let me be clear: such misconduct has no place in football and we will ensure that those who engage in it are put out of the game," Blatter said in a statement.
The 'Warner angle'
Warner, from Trinidad and Tobago, reportedly appeared in a Port of Spain court Wednesday before a judge who set his bail at $394,000, according to local media. He was ordered to hand over his passport and check in with police twice a week before a hearing over whether to extradite him to the United States in July, according to the reports.
Warner has denied any wrongdoing. But two of his sons have pleaded guilty to charges related to the US investigation into bribery and kickbacks involving FIFA officials and sports marketing firms. US agents also raided the Miami headquarters of CONCACAF, the continental confederation under FIFA in the United States. Warner used to be its president.
The Swiss justice ministry said that six of the seven officials arrested in Zurich were opposing their extradition to the United States. FIFA vice presidents Jeffrey Webb - the current CONCACAF chief - and Eugenio Figueredo were among the seven arrested by Zurich police at 6:00 am on Wednesday at the elegant Baur au Lac hotel. All have been held in custody.
Also Read: Probe on for numerous banks' role in FIFA corruption scandal
"The indictment alleges corruption that is rampant, systemic and deep-rooted both abroad and here in the United States," US attorney general Loretta Lynch said. The court indictment said that in the bidding for the 2010 tournament, which went to South Africa, some bribes were handed over in a briefcase stuffed with $10,000 bundles of cash.
South Africa dismissed the claims as "baseless" and demanded proof of the allegations. Russia's foreign ministry accused the United States of illegally applying its judicial force "far beyond its borders".
But Lynch insisted that those accused had systematically abused the US financial system and US law, through racketeering, wire fraud and money-laundering, "and we intend to hold them accountable".
In the US investigation, former FIFA executive committee member Chuck Blazer was reportedly equipped with a tiny recording device hidden inside a keyring as FBI agents sought to gather evidence of fraud during meetings of football bosses at the London 2012 Olympics.
Britain smells a rat post corruption fiasco
British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said on Thursday there was something deeply wrong at the heart of world soccer's governing body FIFA and that it needed to be reformed. Speaking a day after the game was plunged into turmoil following the arrest of senior FIFA officials on US corruption charges, Hammond said football fans around the world were being let down and the game was being brought into disrepute
"There is something deeply wrong at the heart of FIFA and international football needs to reform, needs to get its act together," Hammond told BBC TV.
Britain has long been a critic of FIFA and unsuccessfully bid for the 2018 World Cup which was instead awarded to Russia. Swiss prosecutors have opened their own criminal inquiry into allegations of mismanagement and money laundering related to the awarding of rights to host that tournament and the 2022 event in Qatar.
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