

With splits opening in the world game, the Asian and African confederations backed Blatter and said the election should go ahead as planned.įrench Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius disagreed, saying the vote should be delayed in light of the corruption investigation.īritish Prime Minister David Cameron backed Prince Ali's candidacy and said there was a strong case for a change of leadership at FIFA.īritain has long been a critic of FIFA and unsuccessfully bid for the 2018 World Cup which was awarded to Russia.

The FIFA congress got under way on Thursday evening with singers, dancers and a buffet. The serious business starts on Friday morning in Zurich's Hallenstadion, which is where the announcement of the 20 World Cup venues was made in 2010, decisions which lie at the very heart of most of FIFA's current malaise. authorities said nine soccer officials and five sports media and promotions executives faced corruption charges involving more than $150 million US in bribes.īlatter, who has denied allegations of involvement in corruption, said in a statement on Wednesday: "Let me be clear: such misconduct has no place in football and we will ensure that those who engage in it are put out of the game."įormer World Footballer of the Year Luis Figo, of Portugal, said the day the scandal erupted was "one of the worst days in the history of FIFA". Swiss authorities also announced a criminal investigation into the awarding of the next two World Cups being hosted in Russia in 2018 and Qatar in 2022. They are all contesting extradition but lawyers said the process could be completed within months. Those "turbulences" included a dawn raid by plainclothes police at one of Zurich's most luxurious hotels on Wednesday leaving seven of the most powerful figures in football in custody and facing extradition to the United States on corruption charges. When Blatter failed to show up at a medical conference, FIFA's medical chief Michel D'Hooghe told the medical officers: "President Blatter apologizes for not being able to come today because of the turbulences you have heard about."

corruption charges, Blatter kept out of public view on Thursday until the opening of the congress Platini said 45 or 46 of UEFA's 53 eligible member associations would vote for Jordan's Prince Ali bin Al Hussein to succeed Blatter at an election on Friday.īut it appeared that Blatter still commanded enough of FIFA's 209 member associations and could expect to be anointed for a fifth term as president.ĭespite FIFA assertions that it was business as usual following the arrest of seven senior officials on U.S.

"I'm saying this with sadness and tears in my eyes, but there have been too many scandals, FIFA doesn't deserve to be treated that way," Platini said, speaking after an emergency FIFA meeting in Zurich. He said that he couldn't leave all of a sudden," Platini told a news conference. "I said, I'm asking you to leave, FIFA's image is terrible. A majority of UEFA's member associations will vote for Jordan's Prince Ali bin Al Hussein to succeed Sepp Blatter as the next FIFA president, he says. UEFA president Michel Platini speaks to reporters after a UEFA meeting in Zurich on Thursday.
