Showing posts with label fifa rip-off. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fifa rip-off. Show all posts

Wednesday, 6 July 2011

Don't worry, Sepp Blatter is dealing with all this match-fixing. After Princess Charlene's do at the Oyster Box!


YOU know football’s in trouble when FIFA president Sepp Blatter starts jumping up and down and threatening to call Interpol.

The 75-year-old was doing exactly that in Harare this week, threatening life bans for all those implicated in the current rash of match-fixing scandals around the football-speaking world.

While South Africa, his next port of call, are being investigated over two pre-World Cup friendlies a year ago – a 2-1 win over Colombia at Soccer City and that record 5-0 defeat of Guatemala at Polokwane – Turkey, Italy, South Korea and Zimbabwe are also currently entangled in endless match-fixing scandals.

Blatter, recently re-elected in a one-horse race to stay in charge of world football until 2015, said on his one-day visit to the Zimbabwean capital: “We will ban all those involved in shady deals in this country if they are found guilty. This is a country that has talent which no administrator would want to see going to waste. You have work to develop that talent and not to kill it through things such as match-fixing.”

Blatter, who will be at Durban’s Oyster Box hotel tonight to help Princess Charlene and Prince Albert of Monaco celebrate their nuptials, didn’t seem to see any irony in his dealings with the controversial President Mugabe, not considered one of the world’s greatest leaders of men.

After he toured the Zimbabwe FA Village at Mount Hampden and visited President Robert Mugabe at State House, the Swiss stroller, accompanied by slick right-hand man Jerome Valcke, added: “We have instruments in place that we can use to deal with those elements that are fond of bad behaviour in football. These instruments are there and they shall be used against all those found on the wrong side of the law.”

Mr Mugabe was rubbing his hands at such words, even mention of Interpol failed to worry the old despot as Blatter added: “From now on, FIFA be working with Interpol to investigate some of these malcontents. At FIFA, we do not tolerate corruption and that should cascade to associations countrywide.

“We will make sure that all those that are found guilty do not come back to football for good. They do not deserve space in football.

“We want to see players from Africa taking up their space in the world football. All that depends on you and the people that you work with. Africa has talent. I love Africa and I shall continue working with Africa to develop the continent further.”

Blatter then offered financial assistance to ZIFA in their fight against corruption – and in their bid to develop talent in a continent “with more potential than Latin America”. It amounts to something like $2.5m.

Nothing like the $55m he promised in the FIFA World Cup legacy fund for southern neighbours South Africa. And nothing has been seen of that little windfall yet, despite my recent enquiries.

Still. Give them time. I’m sure all the grass roots footballers will benefit. Soon.

Meanwhile, here’s a quick round-up of yesterday’s football corruption news.

In TURKEY yesterday, seven officials were jailed and a further 25 were “being prepared for interrogation” over Fenerbahce’s Spor Toto Super League triumph last season. Fenerbahce will be probably be stripped of their title and relegated to Turkey’s second division.

Two further clubs, Sivasspor and Eskişehirspor may also be punished with Turkey’s newly-re-elected Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan saying: "Fenerbahçe is not the only club that is being investigated. We are talking about a large match-fixing organization. I hope the investigation will be completed in a fair manner soon.”

In ITALY, federal prosecutor Stefano Palazzi said yesterday Inter Milan bribed Serie A referees during the 2004-05 season in the “Calciopoli” match-fixing scandal.

Palazzi claims former Inter president Giacinto Facchetti violated the ethics of football and attempted to provide an unfair advantage to the Nerazzurri. The investigation kicked off last year after the trial in Naples of former Juventus general manager Luciano Moggi, a scandal which saw Juve relegated and stripped of two Serie A titles.

Now, predictably, Juventus are calling for Inter to be stripped of their 2006 Scudetto, while Inter insist they are innocent of all charges. Italy’s football association is expected to make a decision at its meeting scheduled for July 18.

In ZIMBABWE, even while Blatter was speaking, the local papers are claiming footballers, top coaches, officials and journalists “face imminent arrest” over their roles in Zimbabwe’s “Asiagate” match-fixing scandals, quoting Ralph Maganga, the Zimbabwe FA lawyer.

Maganga said: “There are very interesting names of some coaches, players, officials and even journalists in the report who are mentioned but they will be made public when it is published and when the police have finished their investigations.”

FIFA security chief Chris Eaton and Investigative Officer Terry Steans are looking into events surround Zimbabwe’s part in a series of games in Asia in 2009 where “results were determined by betting syndicates working in cahoots with local football officials, national team coaches, selected players and local sports journalists”.

In SOUTH KOREA, Hong Jeong-ho, captain of the nation’s Olympic football squad, is the latest player to be questioned by prosecutors over corruption in the K-League.

An official said yesterday: "Hong told us last Friday that he had nothing to do with the case. For the time being, we told his club Jeju to keep him on the bench."

Eleven K-League players have been indicted for allegedly accepting cash from gambling brokers in exchange for offers to make deliberate mistakes in games. Several more players are either under arrest or being questioned.

It’s not pretty is it? Hopefully Uncle Sepp, in charge of the world game since 1997, will manage deal with all these problems before he walks away in four years’ time. Presumably, after his do at the Oyster Box with Prince Albert.

You’re doing a great job Mr Blatter. As you said in Zurich before they re-elected you a month ago, football is in a very healthy state. Just ask that nice Mr Jack Warner, FIFA’s man in Jamaica who retired last week. Just before he could be cleared of corruption charges.

I'll be discussing this on eTV's Sunrise with Stacey Holland tomorrow morning at 7am. Tune in if you can... or listen to Robert Marawa's superb Discovery Sports Centre every night on www.metrofm.co.za.

Friday, 17 June 2011

The Lost Legacy Fund: Fifa Still Owe South Africa R550m After Record World Cup


One year after the World Cup’s big kick-off at Soccer City, South Africans are still waiting for any sign of the £50million (R550million) promised by FIFA’s 2010 Legacy Programme.

While recently re-elected president Sepp Blatter glides serenely into a fourth term in charge boasting of FIFA’s record £1.24bn (R12billion) profit from a superb 2010 tournament in the Rainbow Nation, the money he promised as a legacy after Africa’s first World Cup – which FIFA said would benefit grass roots football as well as education, health and social projects – remains unpaid.

Fund spokesman Greg Fredericks confirmed: "None of the £50million has been spent - not one cent. The money is still in Zurich. The delay is simply down to the amount of time it takes to establish legally recognised bodies for handling this amount of money."

Blatter, 75, unveiled his much-hyped fund in December 2010, insisting: "We always said the first World Cup on African soil should leave a lasting legacy. We trusted South Africa and that trust was well founded.

“Fifa are not a circus where we pitch our tent and remove them when the event is over. Fifa will leave a lasting legacy for the youth of South Africa thanks to this successful World Cup.

"This fund is also a reward for South Africans for having been such great hosts. We always said that the first World Cup on African soil should leave a lasting sports and social legacy. This trust is yet another concrete achievement in this area."

Although the £60m fund, administered by accountants Ernst and Young, is reserved for a wide range of public benefit initiatives, Blatter confirmed that only £10m had been actually been used - to build the extravagant South Africa Football Association (SAFA) building next to the Soccer City, where Spain beat Holland to lift their first World Cup last July.

South African president, Jacob Zuma said at the time: "We wanted a World Cup that would contribute to social cohesion and national pride that would enhance African solidarity and improve the country's global reputation. Our expectations were exceeded.

"Now remains the difficult but most important task of ensuring a lasting legacy and to build world-class national teams both at youth and senior level. This legacy trust is an important contribution towards that goal."

With FIFA still reeling over bribery claims surrounding Blatter’s unopposed re-election and the decision to give Qatar the 2022 World Cup, Britain’s best selling tabloid The Sun quotes shadow Culture, Media and Sport Secretary Ivan Lewis as saying: "This is another example of poor leadership. South Africa faces many challenges and FIFA should release the money as a matter of urgency."

Labour MP Michael Dugher added: "FIFA is a shameful shambles. It made a vast sum from South Africa and has a duty to plough that money back as soon as possible."

The High Court has to rubber-stamp the setting up of a trust to decide how to distribute the remaining cash. Best estimates predict a further five-month wait for any pay-out from the Legacy fund – while the cash remains in FIFA’s Swiss bank accounts gaining interest.

The Sun also quotes lawyer Richard Spoor - representing locals in Matsafeni, where the 41,000-seater Mbombela Stadium was built on land belonging to the local people – as saying: "Even now there's no adequate water supply and the living conditions are totally unsanitary.

"The roads are unpaved and there's no proper sewage system. The conditions are unhealthy and frankly quite deplorable."

Who on earth is Neal Collins (nealcol on Twitter)? See www.nealcollins.co.uk.