The integrity of FIFA's financial monitoring panel, which will assess
a secret report into corruption, has been brought into question after a
key member was charged with fraud in a non-football-related criminal
investigation in the Cayman Islands.
The FIFA ethics report into
corruption in the bidding process for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups will
be independently reviewed by the chairman of the organisation's audit
and compliance committee, Domenico Scala. The review of a third party
follows a dispute between the investigator Michael Garcia and a FIFA
ethics judge, Hans-Joachim Eckert over the accuracy of a 42-page summary
of the full report of the investigation.
Scala will become the
third independent assessor to review Garcia's 430-page report into
alleged corruption and ethical violations and will decided whether the
full report will be made available to the FIFA executive committee and
other authorities. The FIFA audit and compliance committee's objectives
state they shall "ensure the completeness and reliability of the
financial accounting and review the external auditors' report at the
request of the executive committee". However, integrity concerns of the
unit were raised because a member, Canover Watson, now faces criminal
proceedings in his native Cayman Islands after being charged with fraud,
money laundering and breach of trust.
Watson was arrested in
September after a probe into a 2010 contract to supply local hospitals
with a card billing system found evidence of fraud. The 43-year-old was
charged by the Cayman Islands anti-corruption unit on Thursday night.
Watson was temporarily suspended by FIFA in September pending the
criminal investigation.
It is not alleged that Scala had any involvement in the criminal
investigation in the Cayman Islands, but Watson's charges are a blow to
the ethical standards of the audit and compliance committee.
Despite
the charges of a member of the committee, Garcia and Eckert welcomed
the independent assessment of Scala and vowed to assist him with any
further questioning.
"Both chairmen agreed that it is of major
importance that the FIFA executive committee has the information
necessary to evaluate which steps are required based on the work done by
the FIFA ethics committee," Garcia and Eckert said in a statement.
A
dispute between Garcia and Eckert arose after the FIFA ethics judge
published a summary of the report that condemned Australia's and
England's World Cup bids while it cleared Qatar and Russia's bidding
committee of any wrongdoing. Garcia's 430-page report dealt with the
bidding process, but additional reports into ethic violations by
specific individuals within FIFA are expected to be submitted. Garcia
initiated proceedings, but it is not expected the ensuing reports will
be made public by FIFA.
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