FIFA vote-selling probe starts Wednesday


  1. Glorea Bentil, AfricaNews reporter in Accra, Ghana
    The Ethics Committee of FIFA would meet on Wednesday to look into allegations of vote selling against Nigeria's Amos Adamu and Oceania representative Reynald Temarii. The football governing body has also widened its investigation into bribery allegations against the two members saying that could suspend one or more bidding nations.
    Stepp blatter_ABC
    A report earlier this week claimed that Adamu and Temarii had offered to sell their votes come the 2018 World Cup bid.

    According to the Guardian, FIFA has therefore asked Claudio Sulser, chairman of its Ethics Committee, to "act without delay to take all possible steps, including the possibility of provisional measures" against the pair and FIFA officials who are also implicated.

    Meanwhile, Temarii said he welcomes a “full and thorough investigation” into the Sunday Times claims.

    The newspaper report said Adamu was filmed asking for £500,000 (N125,000,000) for a personal project and that Tahitian Temarii asked an undercover reporter in Auckland £1.42m (N355,000,000) to fund a sports academy at the OFC’s headquarters.

    “Further to information made public by The Sunday Times, the OFC president and FIFA vice president Reynald Temarii will cooperate fully with the FIFA Ethics Committee and the FIFA secretary general,” a statement from the OFC said.

    “Reynald Temarii welcomes a full and thorough investigation so that all the facts can be heard.”

    The OFC said it would not comment further until the findings of the FIFA Ethics Committee have been released.

    FIFA will decide on December 2 in Zurich which countries will host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. The choices will be made by the 24-strong executive committee.

    However a source close to the executive, who asked not to be named, said both Adamu and Temarii could find themselves suspended or off the committee by then if the claims against them were substantiated.

    “FIFA will not allow anyone or anything to damage the reputation of the voting procedure and it could be that 22 men might make the decision, not 24,” the source said.

    England and Russia are bidding for the 2018 finals along with joint bids from Spain/Portugal and Belgium/Netherlands.

    The candidates for 2022 are the United States, Japan, South Korea, Qatar and Australia.
    FIFA president Sepp Blatter appealed to his executive committee members to stay silent as he launched an investigation.

    “I am sorry to have to inform you of a very unpleasant situation which has developed in relation to an article published ... in the Sunday Times, entitled ‘World Cup votes for sale’,” Blatter wrote in an open letter.

    “I will keep you duly informed of any further developments.

    “In the meantime, I would like to ask you to refrain from making any public comments on this matter.”



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