FBI probing
SeppBlatter role in $100m bribery scandal
The FBI is
investigating the role played by Fifa president SeppBlatterin a $100m (£66.2m)
bribes scandal, a BBC investigation has discovered.
Sports marketing
company ISL paid a total of $100m to officials including former Fifa president
Joao Havelange and ex-Fifa executive Ricardo Teixeira. In return, ISL was
granted lucrative television and marketing rights throughout the 1990s.
Blatter denied knowing about the
bribes and took no action.
He even allowed Teixeira to take
part in the notorious vote for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
Panorama reporter Andrew
Jennings has seen a letter obtained by America's Federal Bureau of
Investigation which casts doubt on Blatter's denial.
The letter, apparently written
by Havelange, talks about the payments he received from ISL. It says Blatter
had "full knowledge of all activities" and was "always
apprised" of them.
The letter is included in an FBI
request to the Swiss authorities for help with their investigation. They ask
for the file of an earlier Swiss investigation into the ISL bribes and they say
"among other things, the prosecutor is investigating Havelange's
statements implicating Blatter".
In 2010, Blatter suppressed a
Swiss legal finding that both Havelange and Teixeria had received bribes from
ISL. In 2013, Blatter told a Fifa ethics committee inquiry he was unaware of
the bribery. He was cleared of any wrongdoing.
Blatter, who says he will stand
down as head of football's world governing body in February 2016, declined to
respond to any allegations put to him.
The 79-year-old is currently
serving a provisional 90-day suspension from Fifa and faces a hearing with the
body's ethics judge in mid-December.
Damian Collins MP tells Panorama
Blatter'sbehaviour was extraordinary. He says: "You have to ask yourself
why did he seek to protect these people, and not just protect them but allow
them to continue to play an active role in some of Fifa's most important
decisions?"
The programme also reveals new
evidence about how much money the Qataris spent winning the right to host the
2022 World Cup.
Lord Triesman, a former Football
Association chairman, was given the figure by sources close to British
intelligence.
"I was told by two sources
that have always been very reliable with good information, good intelligence,
that the sum that Qatar had spent on their bid was £117m."
This is six times what England
spent on its bid for the 2018 World Cup, and almost 12 times the American
expenditure on their 2022 bid.
Qatar's bid chairman did not
respond to correspondence from Panorama.
Lord Triesman said: "I take
the straightforward view that it should be possible when you look at the money
that people have spent to know exactly how it was spent and whether it was
legitimate or not.
"In a way the problem is
that, goodness knows, it's not transparent enough for anyone to know."
Last Thursday, US attorney
general Loretta Lynch announced a further 16 Fifa officials and associates have
been indicted as part of the FBI's ongoing investigation into the organisation.
Gary Lineker, who supported
England's 2018 World Cup bid, tells Panorama: "It makes me feel nauseous
at the levels of corruption in a sport that has been a huge part of my life and
is a huge part of many people's lives right around the world.
"Part of me hopes that with
everything being so clearly rotten, we can come out and somehow start again
and, and correct it.
AhmadouAhidjo
stadium rehabilitation works to gulp 26 billion
FCFA 26 billion
has been set aside for rehabilitation works on the old-age AhmadouAhidjo
stadium. Constructed in 1972, the stadium has a capacity of 38,509 seats.
Lastly renovated in 2005, the
stadium will witness the installation of seats and modernisation that would
increase the seating capacity to 40,000.
The playground, running tracks, vestries
would equally be rehabilitated.
The renovation works would also
include the construction of an infirmary, sanitary facilities and conference
rooms.
The two annex stadiums will also
witnessed some renovations with natural grass and the construction of a seating
capacity of 1000 seats each.
In order to effectively host the
two continental tournaments, African Women Championship in 2016 and the African
Nations Cup in 2019, rehabilitation works are being carried out in various
stadiums across the country, while new ones are also being constructed.
On November 23, 2015, the
Cameroon Football Federation, FECAFOOT, signed seven conventions with some
Councils in the country to construct synthetic stadia in Bagante, Bafia,
Nkoumou, Sangmelima, Ngoundere, Bamenda and Bafia.
The construction works will be
financed both by the Councils and the FECAFOOT.
According to the Minister of
Sports and Physical Education, BidoungMkpatt, the stadiums will need to be
ready by June 2016.
Meanwhile, a team from the Confederation
of African Football, CAF, will conduct its next inspection mission in Cameroon
in February 2016.
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