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Dublin: 9 °C Thursday 20 June, 2013

German FA distances itself from Blatter

As the Bundesliga chairman called for Sepp Blatter’s resignation, Wolfgang Niersbach expressed his dismay with how FIFA is run.

Angela Merkel, left, German Soccer Federation President Wolfgang Niersbach and German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich, right.
Angela Merkel, left, German Soccer Federation President Wolfgang Niersbach and German Interior Minister Hans-Peter Friedrich, right.
Image: Gero Breloer/AP/Press Association Images

THE GERMAN FOOTBALL federation (DBF) today expressed dismay after FIFA president Sepp Blatter insisted he did not have the power to punish former supremo Joao Havelange after the latter was accused of taking bribes.

Court documents released in Switzerland revealed that Brazilian Havelange, now 96 and FIFA president for 24 years before Blatter stepped into the hotseat in 1998, pocketed at least 1.5m Swiss francs (€1.25m) and FIFA executive committee member Ricardo Teixeira at least 12.74m.

The bribes, made by International Sport and Leisure (ISL), were detailed in documents made public by Switzerland’s supreme court and published by the BBC on Wednesday.

FIFA’s discredited Swiss-based marketing partner collapsed in 2001 with debts of around $300 million.

Blatter insisted Thursday he was powerless to sanction his predecessor and added that such payments were not illegal under Swiss law at the time.

DFB chairman Wolfgang Niersbach said he was “shocked” at Blatter’s comments.

“The reaction of the president of FIFA shocked me. If FIFA people, and not the lowest among them, received money and the response is that that this was not illegal at the time then we at the DFB can only distance ourselves,” Niersbach said on the sidelines of a meeting of Bundesliga referees.

Responding to comments from Bundesliga chairman Reinhard Rauball, who wants Blatter to resign, Niersbach said: “That is a decision for him.”

FIFA published the Swiss court’s report on its website on Wednesday and in a statement world football’s governing body emphasised that while Havelange and Teixeira were identified Blatter was not.

“The decision of the Swiss Federal Court also confirms that only two foreign officials will be named as part of the process and that…..the FIFA president is not involved in the case,” the statement stressed.

The court documents did reveal that FIFA chiefs had knowledge that Havelange and Teixeira had been paid bribes by ISL.

It also disclosed that FIFA had agreed to pay 2.5million Swiss francs (€2.08m) in compensation – but only on the condition that criminal proceedings against Havelange and Teixeira were dropped.

Honorary

Havelange, who remains FIFA’s honorary president, stepped down after a 48-year-spell as a member of the International Olympic Committee last December just days before an ethics hearing into his links with ISL.

He was instrumental in bringing the Olympics to Rio de Janeiro and to South America for the first time when in 2009 the IOC elected the city as the 2016 host.

At the vote in Copenhagen he famously invited IOC members to his 100th birthday party on Copacabana beach in 2016 should they award the Games to Rio.

- © AFP, 2012

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Comments (8 Comments)

  • Football is rotten to the core and the FAI is no better.
    I will not attend another Irish international as long as that clown Delaney earns almost 1/2 million euro.
    Almost €500k.
    Think about that. He runs the FAI which runs the league of ireland and he earns almost half a million a year.
    Sorry, no. I won’t be contributing any more

    Reply
  • Blatter is a smug, corrupt little fat cat that should have been f#cked out years ago.
    I’m no fan of football, but seeing him sneering and laughing at the FAI’s request to be included in the last world cup following the famous French hand ball incident made my blood boil.
    Horrible little man.

    Reply
  • The sooner we see the back of Blatter and his rotten regime the better. Delaney us just a buffoon but a smart one……

    Reply
  • Blatter won’t go. He should have gone years ago but no one will shaft him because he will take them all down. No wonder he has a guilty smirk all the time.

    Reply
  • All these big sport organisations suffer from problems of entrenched cliques controlling their affairs and both FIFA and the IOC have been riddled with corruption for years now – every big event seems ti bring with it a bribery scandal. One only has to look at the Olympics – what a monster that has become. City literally beggaring themselves to host the event (Montreal, Athens), spending huge sums of money developing infrastructure that’s rarely used again (Sydney, Athens). The “celebration of sport” is sponsored by global companies that are making kids fat and giving them diabetes etc – Coke, MacDonalds, Cadbury, Unilever. Look past the glamour and the opening ceremony glitz and Faster, Higher, Stronger guff and its not a pretty sight really.

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  • When plattini went in I thought at last someone with sense is going to turn things around. nUnfortunately he just joined the gang of corrupt Wasters

    Reply
  • Sorry: Read is not us

    Reply

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