Geneva: A long-awaited day of judgment on World Cup hosts Russia and Qatar turned into another day of FIFA disarray.
Nearly
four years after FIFA chose Russia and Qatar to host the 2018 and 2022
World Cups, the football body's ethics judge exonerated the two
countries of any corruption in their winning bids and cleared them to
stage the sport's showpiece tournament.
.Michael Garcia said he would appeal Eckert's decision to close the
case, saying it was based on "materially incomplete and erroneous"
interpretation of his own findings - 430 pages of investigative work
sealed by FIFA from public scrutiny.
A 42-page report released by FIFA and designed to bestow integrity on the next two World Cup hosts had its own ethics attacked.
Eckert's
strongest criticism was levelled not at Qatar or Russia but at
England's failed 2018 bid - for aggressively wooing a key FIFA voter.
"I think it's a bit of a joke ... the whole process," said England's Football Association chairman Greg Dyke.
Eckert
refused to identify any FIFA voters placed under suspicion by Garcia
and praised FIFA President Sepp Blatter, while omitting pointed
criticisms in the investigation files.
What wrongdoing had
occurred, Eckert said, did not impair the integrity of voting in 2010 by
an often-discredited FIFA executive committee.
"Today's decision
by [Eckert] contains numerous materially incomplete and erroneous
representations of the facts and conclusions detailed in the
Investigatory Chamber's report," Garcia said in a statement.
"I intend to appeal this decision to the FIFA Appeal Committee."
Garcia
had called for key details of his investigation to be published. That
provoked clashes with Blatter, who has helped protect the privacy of his
boardroom colleagues implicated in seeking favours.
Garcia's
sealed report criticises a culture of entitlement at FIFA and the
quality of Blatter's leadership, according to an official familiar with
Garcia's findings, who spoke on condition of anonymity because the
dossier is supposed to be confidential.
Garcia could be suspended
by FIFA if he publicly reveals details of the case, and removed from
office when the 209 member associations meet at their congress in May
29. On that same day, Blatter is expected to be elected to a fifth term.
Eckert's
report seemed to confirm the 2022 World Cup would definitely be played
in Qatar - though exactly when is still unclear as FIFA seeks an
alternative to the desert heat in June and July. Qatar has also come
under scrutiny for its treatment of foreign labourers.
"FIFA
welcomes the fact that a degree of closure has been reached," the
governing body said. "As such, FIFA looks forward to continuing the
preparations for Russia 2018 and Qatar 2022, which are already well
under way."
Closure seems a long way off in an investigation which could take FIFA and some officials into sports courts into 2016.
Eckert saw no proof of bribes or voting pacts in a probe hampered by uncooperative witnesses and a lack of access to evidence.
"The
evaluation of the 2018/2022 FIFA World Cups bidding process is closed
for the FIFA ethics committee," the German judge wrote.
Both host countries, however, had issues highlighted by Eckert.
Qatar's
bid had "potentially problematic facts and circumstances", plus a
"significant lack of transparency" in its use of advisers.
Eckert
played down previously reported Qatari payments that had raised
suspicion: buying exclusive campaigning rights to an African football
meeting in Angola, and a wealthy individual who lured Argentina and
Brazil to play a match in Doha.
Russia's bid conduct was barely criticised, though Garcia's team had little material to work with.
Computers
leased for use by Russian staffers were later destroyed, and bid
officials said email accounts could not be accessed despite requests to
Google.
Asked on Thursday if Russia had cooperated fully, bid CEO Alexei Sorokin said: "Yes, we did. We think we did our best."
Eckert
condemned England for wooing disgraced former FIFA vice president Jack
Warner and "damaging the image of FIFA and the bidding process".
The corruption case is still open for past and current members of FIFA's ruling board, but it is unclear who might be targeted.
AP
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