Sepp Blatter, Michel Platini Appeals Rejected By FIFA

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A FIFA appeal committee on Wednesday rejected a bid by president Sepp Blatter and UEFA chief Michel Platini to overturn their 90-day bans while Swiss police pursue a criminal inquiry.

The committee said it “rejected in full” the appeals made by Blatter and Platini.

Platini, a candidate for the FIFA presidential election in February, announced through his lawyers that he would now appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).

Blatter, 79, who was recently hospitalised for stress, was consulting with lawyers on his next step, a spokesman said.

FIFA’s ethics committee decided on October 7 to suspend Blatter and Platini for 90 days after Swiss prosecutors launched a criminal mismanagement inquiry against Blatter. Part of the inquiry is into a 2 million dollar payment made by FIFA to Platini in 2011 for work carried out a decade earlier.

The suspension has been a severe blow to Platini’s hopes of winning a FIFA presidential election in Zurich on February 26 when Blatter stands down after 17 years in the post.

The ban from all football-related activity means that the Frenchman cannot campaign in the presidential race against the five confirmed candidates, who have already passed required integrity tests.

FIFA will only conduct an integrity check on Platini when the suspension ends in January.

Platini’s lawyers said the decision was expected and that a final appeal would be made to the Lausanne-based CAS. One of the lawyers, Thibaud d’Ales, said he expected a CAS decision by the end of November.

The appeal committee decision “confirmed that FIFA through its internal organisms, is leading a one-sided, inequitable and partial investigation against Platini in violatiion of the rights of defence,” the lawyers said in a statement.

FIFA “is also organising — and does not even hide it — a deliberate and inadmissible strategy to delay Michel Platini’s campaign for the FIFA presidency.”

The lawyers said the appeal committee decision was dated November 3 but he had only been notified two weeks later “without any justification”.

With FIFA at the centre of a major corruption storm, Blatter won reelection to a fifth term on May 30 but announced four days later that he would stand down.

Blatter, and Platini, have strongly denied any wrongdoing. But last week the veteran powerbroker was hospitalised with a stress related illness.

The suspension of Platini has blown the FIFA race wide open with Asian football chief Sheikh Salman Bin Ebrahim Al Khalifa, former FIFA vice president Prince Ali Al Hussein, former FIFA official Jerome Champagne, South African anti-apartheid campaigner Tokyo Sexwale and UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino all in contention.

Infantino has indicated he would stand aside if his UEFA boss Platini is admitted to the election.

Swiss and US investigations into alleged widescale fraud and corruption in world soccer have rocked FIFA this year.

US authorities have charged 14 FIFA officials and sports business executives with involvement in more than $150 million of bribes for marketing deals.

Swiss authorities are looking into the attribution of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar. There is a parallel inquiry into Blatter’s acts at FIFA.

FIFA’s reform committee, led by former International Olympic Committee director general Francois Carrard, will meet in Zurich on Thursday and Friday to finalise proposals to put to world body’s leaders.

Amongst reforms they are expected to propose include limiting FIFA presidents to 12 years in the post and forcing executive members to stand down when they are 74.

Their proposals will be discussed at a FIFA executive meeting on December 2-3 and then put to a vote at the special congress on February 26 when a new president will be elected.

By AFP

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