Former FIFA president Sepp Blatter on Friday said it was “not acceptable” to be accused at a public event that he stayed silent while likely knowing that senior FIFA officials were corrupt.
“I am not guilty,” a visibly angry Blatter told reporters at the University of Basel in his native Switzerland.
Blatter had been the key speaker in a two-hour debate with a mostly student audience on problems facing world soccer’s scandal-hit governing body. Two protesters briefly disturbed the event with an anti-FIFA banner, chants and a whistle.
Photo: Reuters
After Blatter again blamed officials in the North and South American soccer bodies for corruption, the session closed with the claim made by former International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo.
Ocampo suggested Blatter had known about bribery that US federal prosecutors revealed in May last year in a sprawling indictment that rocked FIFA in its presidential election week.
“The real problem with Mr Blatter is that he had nothing to do with CONCACAF [soccer’s governing body in North and Central America and the Caribbean] and CONMEBOL [the South American body], but he knew,” said Ocampo, once a candidate to be FIFA’s lead ethics investigator.
“Even [if] he was not involved, why was he silent?” the Argentine lawyer told the audience of about 400 people, claiming that “probably [Blatter] knew and he decided to stay in silence.”
Ocampo also said Blatter likely knew — and said nothing — about misconduct implicating long-time FIFA secretary-general Jerome Valcke, who has denied any wrongdoing. Blatter’s right-hand man since 2007 was fired by FIFA in January last year, banned for 12 years by the ethics committee and is the subject of criminal proceedings opened last month by Switzerland’s attorney general.
When Ocampo finished the closing remarks, Blatter joined in applause and reached out to shake hands as his critic walked by.
However, minutes later backstage, Blatter said he was “very unhappy” with the accusation by Ocampo, who is a visiting lecturer at Harvard University.
“It is not acceptable. It is not acceptable,” Blatter told reporters. “I was very surprised at Mr Ocampo invited here for this seminar and then to make such an accusation. Perhaps he is a little bit disappointed because he was the first candidate to be the chair of the ethics committee.”
In 2012, Ocampo was proposed to be FIFA’s first ethics prosecutor by a FIFA advisory group led by Swiss law professor Mark Pieth, who organized Friday’s event.
Ocampo’s appointment was blocked, reportedly due to the influence of then-FIFA senior vice president Julio Grondona of Argentina, who died in 2014 and has since been linked to the bribery conspiracy. Instead, FIFA picked former US attorney for the Southern District of New York Michael Garcia.
Blatter was forced out after more than 17 years as FIFA president by the international bribery scandal. He announced his resignation plans in June last year, days after the US Department of Justice unsealed an indictment alleging a bribery and money laundering conspiracy implicating international soccer leaders, including several FIFA executive committee members.
“I am not responsible morally [for] what the others have done,” Blatter said, also distancing himself from the FIFA ethics judge who resigned this month after being linked to a Panama-based law firm that helped wealthy clients set up offshore accounts.
Uruguayan lawyer Juan Pedro Damiani was appointed in 2006 by the Blatter-chaired FIFA executive committee to the ethics panel and won election in 2013 by FIFA member federations to retain his place.
“Why should I have known it?” Blatter said of allegations that Damiani helped set up offshore accounts for three men, including a former FIFA vice president, indicted by federal prosecutors in Brooklyn. “This is again a disappointment. You should not accept such an election.”
Blatter is a target of the widening investigations by US and Swiss federal prosecutors. He was suspended from duty and then banned by the FIFA ethics committee after Swiss prosecutors opened criminal proceedings against him for suspected mismanagement.
He declined to talk about ongoing criminal cases, including financial investigations into Germany’s 2006 World Cup bid, and did not address a question about potential nepotism in FIFA contracts with a marketing agency headed by his nephew.
Blatter is awaiting a hearing date at the Court of Arbitration for Sport to appeal a six-year ban by FIFA, which he called “shameful.”
“I think it will be the beginning of May, but I don’t know,” Blatter said.
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