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Fifa to publish Michael Garcia's corruption report 'where legally possible' as Sepp Blatter claims 'the crisis has stopped'

Executive Committe decide unanimously to publish the American lawyer's report just days after his shock resignation from Fifa

Tom Peck
Friday 19 December 2014 08:02 EST
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Sepp Blatter
Sepp Blatter (Getty Images)

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Fifa President Sepp Blatter declared “the crisis at Fifa is over” after the Executive Committee of football’s governing body agreed to publish its own confidential report into corruption in the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bids.

But he confirmed that Fifa will not revisit the decision to award those two tournaments to Russia and Qatar. That choice was made in December 2010 by a Fifa Executive Committee of which 11 of the 25 members have since left, eight as a direct consequences of allegations of corruption.

The report will be published with “appropriate redactions” to protect the confidentiality of those who cooperated with its author, US attorney Michael Garcia.

The summary of the report by Garcia’s co-head of Fifa’s Ethics Committee, German judge Hans Joachim Eckert, prompted the American complain of “erroneous representations”. Since then Fifa’s compliance chief Domenico Scala said he had handed the report to two law professors, one Swiss and one German, and that they had found nothing that would require Fifa to strip either host nation of its tournament, which appears to confirm that Eckert’s summary is at least legally sound.

The decision to publish, described by Uefa President Michel Platini as “essential to restoring the credibility of Fifa”, came as a surprise, not least as five of those on the committee that approved its publication are currently under investigation over its contents.

At the conclusion of the meeting in Morocco Blatter urged the world to “look forward” and to be “less critical of Fifa”. He also confirmed he would not be stepping down before the end of his term as president in May 2015. He is expected to stand again.

He said of the very public row between Garcia and Eckert: “Instead of solving problems they have created problems. We have been in a crisis. With the decision today the crisis has stopped.”

The publication of the report will not happen until after the investigations it has prompted, into five committee members, including the chief medical officer Michel d’Hooge, and the German football legend Franz Beckenbauer, though he has since left the committee. This is likely to take several months.

Blatter said it had not been easy to persuade the committee to agree to the report’s publication. “I am a happy president today because my movement is with me. We are going forward but we need your support. Be a little bit critical, but not always critical to Fifa.”

He was speaking ahead of tomorrow’s Club World Cup final between Real Madrid and San Lorenzo of Argentina, the team supported by Pope Francis. “I believe in the Lord, said Blatter. ”He tells me I can go to The Vatican. The team of the Pope is playing tomorrow. If he gives me health, good luck, yes, I will bring back Fifa. But not on my own, I need the Executive Committee.”

Sepp Blatter (centre), the Fifa president, outside La Mamounia before yesterday’s meeting of the executive committee
Sepp Blatter (centre), the Fifa president, outside La Mamounia before yesterday’s meeting of the executive committee (AP)

Publication will do little to placate those who believe the bidding process was highly corrupt, both on the part of those who won the tournaments, and other bidders, including England and Australia. Fifa’s decision is based solely on Garcia’s report, which lacked the authority to compel participants to cooperate with it. Garcia was barred from visiting Russia during his investigations.

The Swiss authorities are also investigating findings in the report, but these do not pertain to the winning bidders. The FBI are understood to be conducting their own investigation.

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