Yahoo – AFP,
17 Nov 2014
London (AFP) - The chairman of England's Football Association said Monday he had written to every member of FIFA's executive committee calling for "urgent action" to ensure ethics investigator Michael Garcia's report into World Cup bidding was published in full.
Michael
Garcia carried out an exhaustive investigation into the bidding
for the
2018/2022 World Cups (AFP Photo/Sebastien Bozon)
|
London (AFP) - The chairman of England's Football Association said Monday he had written to every member of FIFA's executive committee calling for "urgent action" to ensure ethics investigator Michael Garcia's report into World Cup bidding was published in full.
FIFA
cleared Qatar and Russia, the 2018 and 2022 World Cup hosts respectively, of
corruption on Thursday and ruled out a re-vote for the tournaments despite
widespread allegations of wrongdoing.
But within
hours of FIFA's ethics committee publishing a summary of Garcia's report, the
corruption probe was thrown into turmoil when US-based lawyer Garcia said he
would appeal against the findings as they contained "numerous materially
incomplete and erroneous representations of the facts and conclusions"
detailed in his investigation.
FIFA has
defended its refusal to publish Garcia's report on the grounds it would
undermine a promise to all those those who gave evidence on condition of
anonymity.
But two
'whistleblowers' insisted Monday that FIFA ethics committee judge Hans-Joachim
Eckert's summary of Garcia's findings meant it was easy for each of them to be
identified in any case.
Eckert's
report criticised the team behind England's failed bid to stage the 2018 World
Cup for its relationship with disgraced former FIFA executive member Jack
Warner.
But FA
chairman Greg Dyke was adamant his move, which followed a call by his
predecessor David Bernstein for a boycott of the 2018 World Cup unless there
was radical reform of FIFA, was not 'sour grapes' or part of the British
media's so-called "obsession" with Sepp Blatter, the president of
football's global governing body.
'Cannot
go on like this this'
Dyke's
letter said: "As you probably know the reputation of FIFA was already low
in England and much of Europe before the events of last week.
"The
failure to publish Mr Garcia's report, and his statement that the summary
report which was published contained 'numerous materially incomplete and
erroneous representations', has resulted in a further decline in public
confidence of FIFA. We cannot go on like this.
"Complete
transparency is required if the actions of all those who bid, including England
2018, are to be judged fairly."
Dyke added
critical media reports about FIFA and the 2022 World Cup in Qatar could not be
brushed aside in the way Blatter did in June.
"The
reports...do provide compelling evidence of wrongdoing. They cannot be simply
dismissed as 'racist' or 'an attack on FIFA' as Mr Blatter described them at
the FIFA Congress in Brazil," he wrote.
FIFA President
Sepp Blatter in 2010 announed Qatar as host country
for the 2022 World Cup (AFP
Photo/Philippe Desmazes)
|
"Urgent
action is needed if confidence in FIFA is to be rebuilt in England. The FA is
of the view that this action should start with the full publication of Mr
Garcia's report."
Earlier on
Monday, Phaedra Almajid, who worked for the Qatar 2022 bid team before losing
her job in 2010, said she had been let down over promises her identity would be
protected -- assurances that had been central to her decision to co-operate
with Garcia's investigation.
Both
Almajid and Bonita Mersiades, who worked for Australia's unsuccessful 2022
World Cup bid, have separately registered formal complaints against Eckert.
Almajid, in
a letter to Garcia, said her safety and that of her sons had been compromised.
"Identifying
me and falsely discrediting me sends a message to anyone who may think to come
forward that their credibility and protection will be in jeopardy for the rest
of their lives," Almajid said.
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