(Reuters) - FIFA
appeared to be in limbo on Thursday as a long-awaited report on the
turbulent bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups was
criticized by its own investigator while the soccer world watched on in a
mixture of bewilderment and anger. The dramatic twist led
to further calls for the investigation's 430-page report to be
published in full, rather than the 42-page statement which was made
public on Thursday. The
statement, issued by FIFA ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckert, said it
could find no grounds for re-opening the bidding process for the
tournaments which were awarded to Russia and Qatar respectively in December 2010. Former
United States Attorney Michael Garcia, who spent more than a year
investigating allegations of corruption before turning his findings over
to Eckert, complained that the final version contained “numerous
materially incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts”. He also said he would appeal against the findings of the report which he helped compile. If
he does so, that would take the case to the FIFA appeal committee,
whose members are appointed by the executive committee, which in turn
was at the center of the ethics investigation as it chose Russia and Qatar as hosts. "We
needed and still need to know what happened before and after the
December 2010 vote," said Jerome Champagne, who will challenge incumbent
Sepp Blatter for the FIFA presidency in May.
"I have said consistently and constantly that the FIFA World Cup should
be protected for what it represents for the game and for the football
community at large."
He added: "The potential future proceedings against officials mentioned
in the investigation will constitute an important step for the full
closure of the case." There
was anger in England, whose bid team were heavily criticized for
over-indulging former FIFA powerbroker and executive committee member
Jack Warner in the run-up to the vote. "It
has made a bit of a mockery of the whole process if the person who did
the investigation says the report didn’t reflect what he believed. I’m a
bit shocked by it all, as I’m sure most people are," England FA
chairman Greg Dyke told Sky Sports, joining the calls for full
publication. “We’ve always wanted the full report published, you may have to take out some names that were given confidentially,” he said. “But we’ve always wanted it published, Garcia wants it published and he clearly wants it published now." There has been mystery and confusion throughout the investigation over the exact process. Garcia's
findings were initially expected to be announced before the World Cup
only for the date to be pushed back until July and then September. It
then emerged that his findings would not be published but merely passed
on to Eckert for a preliminary judgment and statement. At that
point, Garcia led demands for his report to be published and was joined
by several FIFA executive committee members. However, in October, Eckert said the findings could not be published in full for "legal reasons".
One of the criticisms most often labeled against FIFA, much of whose
headquarters lies below ground level in a leafy Zurich suburb, is that
it lacks transparency. "We
need more openness, more of a discussion culture in sports
organizations and football," said Sylvia Schenk, a representative of
anti-corruption watchdog Transparency International, in September. "If
they just publish the report...on what happened in Qatar, without
transparency, and just punish individuals and say 'we did a good job and
we are clean', FIFA will not regain trust, FIFA will not gain respect."
FIFA in limbo after latest twist in World Cup saga
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Reuters
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