The vote to decide the hosts of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, hit by corruption allegations, will go ahead as planned on Dec. 2, though FIFA president Sepp Blatter admitted it had been a mistake to choose both at the same time.
Blatter also said that the vote would be held with only 22 voters if two members of the executive committee, suspended for allegedly offering to sell their votes, were not reinstated by then.
A defiant Blatter said that the sport was in safe hands with FIFA, expressed confidence in the committee which is investigating the case internally and questioned the methods of the Sunday Times newspaper which made the allegations.
“We are five weeks from the final decision, so there was never a question of changing anything in the procedure,” he told a press conference after a two-day meeting of FIFA’s executive committee. “On Dec. 2, here in Zurich, FIFA’s executive committee will hold a vote, which will be a secret ballot and will determine the national associations which will host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup. We cannot stop the match which has already started.”
However, Blatter reflected that it was probably a mistake to pick both hosts in the same vote.
“I have said I assume the responsibility and I think it was not the right way to go, but now we are in the situation where we have to go on, but I’m not convinced now it was the right decision,” he said.
Russia and England are bidding to host the 2018 World Cup along with joint bids from Spain-Portugal and the Netherlands-Belgium. Japan, South Korea, Australia, the US and Qatar are the candidates for 2022.
FIFA has been shaken by allegations of vote-selling by two FIFA executive committee members and collusion by unnamed bidding nations.
Amos Adamu of Nigeria and Reynard Temarii of Tahiti have been provisionally suspended by the ethics committee after being accused by Britain’s Sunday Times of offering to sell their votes to undercover reporters, but Blatter said he had confidence in the ethics committee, which is investigating the case and is scheduled to meet from Nov. 15 to Nov. 17, to make a definitive decision.
“We have the necessary instruments inside FIFA,” he said. “If something dramatically serious happens before the end of November, then of course the results will be dramatic and we will be ready for that.”
Only the 24 members of the executive committee can take part in the votes and there had been confusion as to what might happen if that number was reduced to 23 or 22, but Blatter cleared up the question.
“If people are suspended for the vote on Dec. 2, they will not be replaced,” he said.
He bristled with indignation when asked how FIFA could guarantee a clean vote.
“The members of the executive committee are entitled to vote, they have the right to vote and it will be done by secret ballot, one by one, and it will be supervised by a notary of the Zurich canton,” he said.
He also questioned the methods used by the Sunday Times.
“One can ask oneself whether such an action, trying to set traps for people, is appropriate,” he said. “I’m not afraid because fear is not the term of the day. It’s an uncomfortable position for the president of FIFA, but we have the necessary instruments to make sure we can and do react.”
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