Soccer

FIFA report on World Cup corruption to be kept secret

A investigative report into corruption during the bidding process for 2018 and 2022 World Cups will remain secret, FIFA president Sepp Blatter told reporters Friday.

Confidentiality is first priority for world governing body for soccer

FIFA president Sepp Blatter is tightlipped about a corruption probe during a media conference in Zurich, Switzerland, on Friday. (Arnd Wiegmann/Reuters)

A corruption probe into the bids for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups will stay secret, FIFA president Sepp Blatter said Friday, rejecting a request from the chief investigator to make his report public.

Blatter said FIFA's ethics rules state that all such investigations should be confidential, and that no member of his executive committee asked for the report to be published at its meeting on Friday. He also chided ethics prosecutor Michael Garcia for issuing a press release to request that his investigation be published, rather than contacting Blatter personally.

"The FIFA president or secretary general have not had any demands or requests from Mr. Garcia to speak with us," Blatter said at a media conference.

"The only contact that we have had ... was his press releases."

Garcia issued a statement on Wednesday calling for FIFA's ruling board to allow "appropriate publication" of his work. FIFA's ethics code only allows summaries of the actual verdict to be released.

Garcia, a former U.S. Attorney, has given FIFA's ethics judge Joachim Eckert first-draft reports totalling 430 pages from his team investigating alleged unethical behavior by senior FIFA officials during the bidding campaigns won by Russia (2018) and Qatar (2022).

Several FIFA board members who joined since the December 2010 votes have publicly backed Garcia's push to relax secrecy, with some seeking full disclosure.

"Most of the requests coming for the publication of this report were from people [who] were not there on Dec. 2, when the decision was taken," Blatter said. "Today, there was not any longer any requests from any of these members in the FIFA to publish this report."

Garcia's initial reports recommend further action against some voters, according to a FIFA statement released Sept. 5. At a FIFA-hosted conference last week, Garcia talked of building public confidence by announcing detailed charges.

Eckert has set an early-November deadline to finish reading the initial reports, then Garcia can request opening formal cases.

Final verdicts are expected around April next year. Eckert has suggested he will limit sanctions to individuals, and leave Blatter's board to decide whether to take action against Russia or Qatar.


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