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[國際賽]FIFA副主席指若證實2022世界杯投票過程涉及貪污,將就主辦權進行重選 [復制鏈接]

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只看樓主 倒序閱讀 使用道具 樓主   發表于: 2014-06-01
Qatar World Cup 2022: Fifa vice-president 'would support' re-vote

Fifa vice-president Jim Boyce says he would support a re-vote to find a new host for the Qatar World Cup in 2022 if corruption allegations can be proven.
The Sunday Times alleges Fifa officials accepted payments  totalling £3m in return for support of the Qatari bid.
Fifa's chief investigator Michael Garcia is already conducting a long-running inquiry into the allegations.

"I would have no problem if the recommendation was for a re-vote," Boyce told BBC Radio 5 live.
"If Garcia reports that wrongdoing happened for the 2022 vote then it has to be looked at very seriously," Boyce told 5 live's Sportsweek programme.
"The Fifa executive committee are 100% behind Garcia," he continued. "He will be allowed to go and speak to anyone from around the world to complete his mission.
All evidence should go to him and we will then await a full report on his findings."

The allegations of corruption centre on former Fifa official Mohammed bin Hammam,
with the Sunday Times claiming to have obtained millions of secret documents that implicate the former Asian Football Confederation president
in corrupting members of football's governing body to win the 2022 World Cup.
The newspaper alleges the documents, seen by BBC sports editor David Bond, show that Bin Hammam, 65,
was lobbying on his country's behalf at least a year before the decision to award the country hosting rights.

They also allegedly show he had also made payments into accounts controlled by the presidents of 30 African football associations
and accounts controlled by the Trinidadian Jack Warner, a former vice-president of Fifa.
Qatar 2022 and Bin Hammam have always strenuously denied any wrongdoing and that he actively lobbied on their behalf in the run-up to the vote in December 2010.
When approached by the Sunday Times to respond to their fresh claims of obtaining secret documents, Bin Hammam's son Hamad Al Abdulla declined to comment on his behalf.

Bin Hammam has previously been at the centre of controversy in the football world.
He was initially banned from the sport for life in July 2011 after being found guilty of attempted bribery over votes in that year's Fifa presidential election.
However his ban was annulled a year later by the Court of Arbitration for Sport which said there was insufficient evidence to support the punishment.
Fifa issued him with a second life ban in December 2012 for "conflicts of interest" while he was president of the Asian Football Confederation.
In March 2014, the Daily Telegraph reported a company owned by Bin Hammam had paid Warner and his family more than £1m.
Payments were claimed to have been made shortly after Qatar won the right to host the 2022 World Cup.
Qatar insists Bin Hammam never had any official role supporting the bid and always acted independently from the Qatar 2022 campaign.
Garcia is already conducting his inquiry into allegations of corruption and wrongdoing during the 2018 and 2022 decisions.
He is due to meet senior officials from the Qatar 2022 organising committee in Oman on Monday.

http://www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/27654587
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Qatar bid team deny corruption
16:37 - 1 JUN 2014
The Qatar 2022 World Cup bid committee has denied all allegations of wrong-doing after allegations of widespread corruption during the bidding process.

The Sunday Times claims it has received "hundreds of millions" of documents which allegedly reveal disgraced former FIFA executive committee member
Mohamed Bin Hammam made payments to football officials in return for votes for Qatar.

In a statement issued on Sunday, the bid committee said Bin Hammam had no association with them while denying any suggestion of wrong-doing.
The committee said it was co-operating with the ongoing investigation led by FIFA's chief investigator Michael Garcia.

"The Qatar 2022 Bid Committee always upheld the highest standard of ethics and integrity in its successful bid to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup," the statement said.

"In regard to the latest allegations from The Sunday Times,
we say again that Mohamed Bin Hammam played no official or unofficial role in Qatar's 2022 Bid Committee.
As was the case with every other member of FIFA's Executive Committee, our bid team had to convince Mr. Bin Hammam of the merits of our bid.

"We are cooperating fully with Mr. Garcia's on-going investigation
and remain totally confident that any objective enquiry will conclude we won the bid to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup fairly.

"Following today's newspaper articles, we vehemently deny all allegations of wrong-doing.
We will take whatever steps are necessary to defend the integrity of Qatar's bid and our lawyers are looking in to this matter.
The right to host the tournament was won because it was the best bid and because it is time for the Middle East to host its first FIFA World Cup."

The Sunday Times alleged Bin Hammam, also the former Asian Football Confederation (AFC) president
who was banned for life from football administration by the FIFA ethics committee, had made payments into accounts controlled
by the presidents of 30 African football associations and accounts controlled by the Trinidadian Jack Warner, a former vice-president of FIFA.

Although Sunday's statement distanced Bin Hammam from the bid committee, bid chairman Sheikh Mohammed bin Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani
gave an interview to World Football Insider in 2010 in which he described Bin Hammam as the bid's "biggest asset".

http://www.itv.com/worldcup/qatar-bid-team-deny-corruption


Oliver Kay @OliverKayTimes  ·  24m
Qatar 2022 (Nov 2010): Bin Hammam "definitely our biggest asset in the bid.”
Qatar 2022 (now): BH "played no official or unofficial role"




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只看該作者 5  發表于: 2014-06-09
Qatar 2022: Fifa sponsors demand thorough investigation

Fifa is under growing pressure from a number of high-profile sponsors following its controversial decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar.

Sony, Adidas, Coca-Cola, Visa and Hyundai/Kia want the governing body to conduct an investigation into claims of wrongdoing in the bidding process.
In total, five of Fifa's six main sponsors have issued statements relating to the Qatar bid.
Only airline Emirates has so far declined to comment.
Qatar was chosen to host the World Cup in December 2010, beating off competition from Australia, Japan, South Korea and the United States.
Fifa vice-president Jim Boyce has already said he would support a re-vote if allegations of corruption are proven.
In response to the clamour for an investigation, Fifa president Sepp Blatter has called for time.
He posted a message on his Twitter account  at the weekend, insisting Fifa was taking the allegations seriously.
However, the concerns of a number of high-profile sponsors will increase the pressure on Fifa to act.
German sportswear company Adidas, which has a long-term sponsorship deal with Fifa that runs until 2030, said in a statement: "The negative tenor of the public debate around Fifa at the moment is neither good for football nor for Fifa and its partners."
Coca-Cola added: "Anything that detracts from the mission and ideals of the Fifa World Cup is a concern to us."
Car manufacture Kia, which shares sponsorship of the World Cup with affiliate Hyundai, said in a statement: "We are confident that Fifa is taking these allegations seriously and that the investigatory chamber of the Fifa ethics committee will conduct a thorough investigation."

Fifa issued a statement from Thierry Weil, its marketing director, in an attempt to calm the situation.
"We are in constant contact with our commercial affiliates, including Adidas, Sony and Visa, and they have 100% confidence in the investigation currently being conducted by Fifa's independent ethics committee," said Weil.
"Our sponsors have not requested anything that is not covered by the on-going investigation by the ethics committee."
Last week, The Sunday Times newspaper alleged that Qatar's former Fifa vice-president, Mohamed bin Hammam, paid £3m to football officials around the world to help win support for Qatar in the run up to the World Cup vote in December 2010.
Now Bin Hammam is facing claims he used his contacts in the Qatari royal family and government to arrange deals and favours to secure the tournament for his country.
According to the emails, some of which have been seen by the BBC, the 65-year-old Bin Hammam:
Visited Vladimir Putin in the Kremlin to discuss "bilateral relations" between Russia and Qatar a month before the votes for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.
Brokered government level talks for Thailand's Fifa executive Worawi Makudi to push a deal on importing gas from Qatar to Thailand. Makudi told the paper he did not receive a concession for his part in any gas deal.
Invited Germany's former Fifa executive Franz Beckenbauer to Doha just five months after the vote with bosses from an oil and gas shipping firm which was employing him as a consultant. The firm involved says it was exploring possible Qatari investments in the shipping and maritime sector but that no deal ever came from the talks. When approached by the Sunday Times, former German international Beckenbauer declined to comment.
Fixed meetings between nine Fifa executive committee members, including Blatter, with members of the Qatari royal family.
Arranged a meeting between the Qatar bid team and Uefa boss Michel Platini at European football's headquarters in Nyon. Platini, who has openly admitted voting for Qatar, says Bin Hammam did not attend the meeting and insists he has nothing to hide.
Qatar's World Cup organising committee reiterated it was confident the bid had been won fairly. Bin Hammam has so far declined to comment.
Emails leaked to The Sunday Times appear to demonstrate Bin Hammam, banned from football for life in 2012 for his part in another corruption scandal, was working to secure support for the Qatar bid.
But while that might be uncomfortable for Qatar and Fifa, it is not clear that he or the bid broke any of the governing body's bidding rules.
Fifa executive committee members were not subject to the same restrictions placed on bid officials, while all bidding nations used heads of state and senior government figures to try to win votes.
England's failed bid for the 2018 tournament used Prince William, the president of the FA, and Prime Minister David Cameron throughout the latter stages of their campaign.
It is also part and parcel of big sporting bids for countries to use them to try and broker big trade deals.
Fifa's chief investigator, lawyer Michael Garcia, must now consider whether to include the latest revelations in his long-running inquiry into the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments.
He intends to wind up his investigation on 9 June before filing his report with Fifa's new adjudicatory chamber in the middle of July.
Fifa has confirmed to BBC Sport that Garcia will provide an update in person to delegates from 209 national associations in Brazil this week.


www.bbc.com/sport/0/football/27751265

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