/ 18 November 2010

Fifa executive members suspended by World Cup probe

Fifa said on Thursday that two members of its executive committee had been excluded for one to three years by its probe into alleged mis-dealings in bidding for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

Corruption and collusion allegations have marred bidding for the football body’s 2018 and 2022 World Cups just two weeks before the hosts are meant to be chosen.

The ethics committee of world football’s governing body has been meeting since Monday in an attempt to complete its investigation after two of the 24 members of Fifa’s executive committee were provisionally suspended last month.

Four other football officials and ex-Fifa decision makers were also sidelined following the claims of possible vote buying raised in a controversial sting by undercover reporters for a British newspaper.

Fifa has also scheduled a meeting of its decision-making executive committee for Friday, a spokesperson told Agency France-Presse, but no further details were given.

2018 and 2022 bidding
England, Russia and joint bids by Spain-Portugal and Netherlands-Belgium are in the running to host the 2018 World Cup while Australia, the United States, Japan, Qatar and South Korea are bidding for 2022.

Fifa’s decision to choose the organisers of two World Cups at the same time has been criticised by Asian Football Confederation president Mohamed Bin Hammam.

Bin Hammam, a member of Fifa’s executive committee, said that voting for one tournament at a time will reduce the possibility of corruption allegations that have plunged the process into crisis.

“I hope it’s the last time,” Bin Hammam told the Aspire4Sport conference in Doha Wednesday.

“From the beginning the Asian members, including me, were not convinced that deciding two World Cups at the same time was a good idea. I raised my voice and said the decision for 2022 should perhaps have been in 2016, or maybe 2014, and that it was not appropriate for people sitting in the Fifa executive committee today to make that decision. We raised so many objections but the vote was taken and we were outvoted. I hope people have realised that it was wrong.” — Sapa-AFP