Tuesday, 22 December 2015

Blatter, Platini banned for eight years

ZURICH: Dec 22, 2015, Reuters
Fifa president Sepp Blatter. Reuters file photo

Fifa president Sepp Blatter and European soccer boss Michel Platini were on Monday banned from football for eight years for ethics violations, leaving the global game leaderless as it struggles with a swirl of corruption cases.

The pair, who were also fined, had been suspended in October while an investigation was carried out into a 2 million Swiss franc ($2.02 million) payment that soccer's global governing body made to Platini in 2011, with Blatter's approval.

Blatter was fined 50,000 Swiss francs and Platini, who boycotted the ethics committee hearing as unfair, 80,000. The decision means that Blatter's 17 years at the helm of world soccer will end in disgrace, and spells the end of Platini's hopes of replacing the 79-year-old in a presidential election in February.

The Swiss, who spent four decades at Fifa, who came out swinging, told reporters that he was sorry that the president of Fifa was being treated as a “punching ball”.“I will fight for me and I will fight for Fifa,” said Blatter, unshaven and with a sticking plaster on his cheek, but defiant.

He said Fifa’s Ethics Committee had no right to relieve him of his duties and that he would challenge the decision before the Appeals Committee and, if necessary, the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne, Switzerland, and in the Swiss courts. The committee said it had not found evidence that the payment, made at a time when Blatter was seeking re-election, constituted a bribe, which meant the men were spared potential lifetime bans. But it said the transaction had nevertheless lacked transparency and presented a conflict of interest. 
 

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