Former FIFA
executive Jack Warner has surrendered to authorities in Trinidad and Tobago as
a massive scandal charging top officials with bribery continues to unfold.
Warner has denied any wrongdoing.
Deutsche Welle, 28 May 2015
Former FIFA
Vice President Jack Warner was arrested late Wednesday in Trinidad and Tobago,
the latest high-profile figure to be ensnared in a sweeping corruption scandal
charging top soccer federation leaders took $150 million (137 million euros) in
bribes and kickbacks over more than 20 years.
US prosecutors
allege Warner accepted bribes during host selections for the 1998 and 2010
World Cups, held in France and South Africa respectively.
Prosecutors
say Warner, in a scheme to fix the voting for the 2010 World Cup in South
Africa, directed a family member to fly to Paris to "accept a briefcase
containing bundles of U.S. currency in $10,000 stacks in a hotel room from a
high-ranking South African bid committee official."
The
72-year-old Warner initially protested his innocence on Facebook, but later turned
himself in to authorities. He was granted $2.5 million bail and was expected to
be held overnight Wednesday. Warner has denied any wrongdoing.
Warner's
arrest follows the announcement Wednesday of racketeering and other charges
against top FIFA executives, several of whom were arrested in a Zurich hotel.
Six of those arrested are fighting extradition to the United States, according
to the Swiss justice ministry.
The
indicted "were expected to uphold the rules that keep soccer honest and to
protect the integrity of the game," said US Attorney General Loretta
Lynch, who formally announced the charges.
"Instead,
they corrupted the business of worldwide soccer to serve their interests and to
enrich themselves," Lynch said.
AFC backs
Blatter
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FIFA
chairman Sepp Blatter has resisted
calls to step down amid the scandal
|
"Let
me be clear: such misconduct has no place in football and we will ensure that
those who engage in it are put out of the game," Blatter said after the
scandal broke.
UEFA,
European soccer's governing body, has called for Friday's vote to be postponed,
saying the FIFA congress and presidential election risked becoming
"farce," the Asian Football Confederation, a key ally of Blatter,
insisted Thursday that the FIFA congress and presidential election go ahead as
initially planned.
The AFC
"expresses its disappointment and sadness at Wednesday's events in Zurich
whilst opposing any delay in the FIFA presidential elections," a statement
from the AFC said.
"Furthermore,
the AFC reiterates its decision taken at the AFC Congress in Sao Paulo in 2014,
endorsed at subsequent congresses in Melbourne and Manama in 2015, to support
FIFA president Joseph S. Blatter."
Despite not
having UEFA's support, Blatter is expected to easily win re-election as he is
supported by a wide majority of 209 national soccer federations that will cast
ballots Friday.
bw/jil (AFP, AP, Reuters)


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