Fifa: Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini get eight-year bans – BBC News
Fifa president Sepp Blatter and Uefa boss Michel Platini have been suspended for eight years from all football-related activities following an ethics investigation.
They were found guilty of breaches surrounding a £1.3m ($2m) “disloyal payment” made to Platini in 2011.
The Fifa ethics committee found Blatter and Platini had demonstrated an “abusive execution” of their positions.
Blatter later told media: “I will fight for me and for Fifa.”
The bans come into force immediately.
Blatter and Platini have also been fined £33,700 ($40,000) and £54,000 ($80,000) respectively.
Both men continue to deny wrongdoing and a spokesman for Blatter confirmed he will appeal against the ban and is prepared to take the case to the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne.
Platini is expected to follow suit.
Fifa boss since 1998, Blatter, 79, had already announced he was quitting with a presidential election in February.
Platini, 60, was tipped as a future leader of football’s world governing body and is a three-time European Footballer of the Year.
He is also a former captain of France and has been in charge of Uefa – European football’s governing body – since 2007.
Blatter – ‘I will fight’
Blatter was in defiant mood at a news conference he had called in advance of the punishments being made public.
“I will fight, ” he told the media. “I will fight for me and for Fifa.”
He said he was “really sorry” that he is still “a punching ball” and that he has become tainted in the eyes of humanity.
He added that he thought he had convinced the Fifa ethics tribunal that the payment from Fifa to Platini was legitimate.
Why are they banned?
Blatter and Platini were found guilty of ethics code breaches over the “disloyal payment”.
Both claimed the payment was honouring an agreement made in 1998 for work carried out between 1998 and 2002 when Platini worked as a technical adviser for Blatter.
The payment was not part of Platini’s written contract but the pair insisted it was a verbal agreement, which is legal under Swiss law.
German judge Hans-Joachim Eckert, the chairman of Fifa’s adjudicatory chamber, held disciplinary hearings for the pair last week.
Charges included conflict of interest, false accounting and non co-operation, with investigators submitting a file of more than 50 pages.
Statement – key points
- The payment made in February 2011 had “no legal basis” in the contract signed by both men when Platini started working for Blatter on 25 August, 1999.
- Both men’s explanation that there was an “oral agreement” over the payment was rejected as “not convincing”.
- Blatter’s actions did not show “commitment to an ethical attitude”, and both men were found to be in “a conflict of interest”.
- Platini also failed to act with “complete credibility and integrity” and showed “unawareness of the importance of his duties”.
- The committee said there was “not sufficient evidence” to establish the payment was a bribe, but both men demonstrated an “abusive execution” of their positions.
Reaction
“The fish rots from the head down and we know how rotten the head of Fifa was,” said Fifa reform campaigner Damian Collins.
“We now have to find out just how much of the organisation has been infected.”
The British MP added: “We will see in the next few months whether this is the end of Fifa, too.
“They have to implement wide-ranging reforms of the organisation, led by an independent outside body.”
Is this the end for both men?
Platini boycotted his hearing in Zurich on Friday in protest, claiming a decision already appeared to have been made.
His lawyers attended, but it looks as though the Frenchman is preparing to take the matter to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Blatter is planning to hold a news conference at 10:00 GMT.
He has already announced he would not be seeking a fifth term as Fifa president but is unlikely to accept the ruling of the ethics investigators.
Whatever happens, they will find it hard to recover from the damage done to their reputations.
What now for Fifa?
World football’s governing body has been in turmoil for several months now, following numerous allegations of corruption.
Seven Fifa officials were arrested at a Zurich hotel at the end of May.
And US authorities have charged 39 football officials and sports business executives over more than £134m ($200m) in bribes for football television and marketing deals.
Swiss prosecutors are also investigating Fifa’s management as well as the award of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.
There is also pressure from governments and the International Olympic Committee for Fifa to push through major reforms aiming at making governance more transparent and accountable.
Who will be the next Fifa boss?
The presidential election is due to take place on 26 February.
There are currently five candidates to take over:
- Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim al-Khalifa –
Bahrain, head of Asian football; - Tokyo Sexwale
– South Africa, politician and tycoon; - Prince Ali bin al-Hussein
– Jordan, a former Fifa vice-president; - Gianni Infantino
– Switzerland, Uefa general secretary; - Jerome Champagne
– France, a former Fifa assistant general secretary.
Voting will take place by secret ballot, with all Fifa’s 209 member states having a vote each.
Profile – Sepp Blatter
Joseph ‘Sepp’ Blatter was born in the alpine town of Visp in 1936. Blatter has been married three times and has one daughter.
After finishing school, he did his obligatory service in the Swiss army, rising to the rank of colonel.
He did not play football professionally but worked in the watch industry, then as a sports writer and in sports management, serving at the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation.
Blatter moved to Fifa as its technical director in 1975, before working as the general secretary from 1981.
He was elected, to much fanfare in his homeland, as the eighth Fifa president in 1998, succeeding Dr Joao Havelange.
He has split opinion with his sometimes controversial statements about the game but remains hugely popular with countries in Asia and Africa.
In 2004,
he said female footballers should wear skimpier kits
to increase the game’s popularity and, following the decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar, said gay fans going to the Gulf state, where homosexuality is illegal,
should “refrain from sexual activity”.
Profile – Michel Platini
Platini has been boss of European football’s governing body since 2007 but rose to fame as one of France’s greatest footballers.
The son of a former professional player, he played for Nancy and St Etienne before joining Italian giants Juventus, with whom he was named European Footballer of the Year on three occasions.
A midfielder, Platini also made 72 appearances for France, captaining them to victory at the 1984 European Championship and helping them reach the semi-finals of two World Cups, in 1982 and 1986.
He retired as player at 32, turning to coaching and managed the French national team with mixed results from 1988 to 1992.
After turning down an offer to coach Spanish giants Real Madrid, he was asked by French president Francois Mitterrand to organise the 1998 World Cup in France and, shortly after, was appointed vice-president of the French Football Federation.
Since 2002, Platini has been a member of the executive committee of Fifa and was elected president of Uefa in 2007. He was re-elected and also became Fifa vice-president.
Platini, married with two children, worked as Blatter’s technical adviser between 1999 and 2002, but later fell out with his former boss.