Fifa in crisis live blog - Bin Hammam out of race as ethics committee meets | John Ashdown
Bin Hammam vows to clear name after withdrawing
Fifa ethics committee hearing meeting later on Sunday
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2.49pm: Here's AP's Rob Harris on Twitter: "Interesting to note here @ FIFA, press pack formed of intl wires agencies & UK paper/TV reporters. Few journos from elsewhere."
2.33pm: Here's Matt Scott in Zurich: "Wandering around the outbuilding at Fifa House where we press are corralled I have discovered that apparently three of Fifa's 387 personnel are tailors. There is a room marked "Tailors" in which people are frantically sewing badges on blazers. Less than 48 hours before the two-day Fifa congress, they are doubtless busy. How they are occupied the other 383 days of the year, I cannot testify. NB: Average Fifa staffer's salary, 2010 US$200,000."
2.02pm: Some strong words from former International Olympic Committee vice-president Dick Pound on the BBC: ""If Fifa is not going to do the game any good, the game may have to do something to Fifa. You could withdraw from Fifa, for example, and say we're not satisfied that the organisation is not being properly run and it isn't a credit to the sport we know and love, so let's have an alternative. That's one possibility. It has been done in other sports."
1.38pm: An interesting idea from Forza77 below the line: "
"I think the fans and media should go after FIFA's sponsers - do visa, addidas, budweiser, whoever want this associated with their products - media should keep on at them, whilst we the fans boycott all associated brands and companies"
1.11pm: This whole shebang was kicked off, of course, by our old friend Chuck Blazer, a man who likes to wear his trousers high. In fact, while we're waiting for Fifa's announcement, you could do worse than take a tour through Chuck's blog. Halloween is a particular highlight.
12.53pm: So who is the man in charge of today's proceeedings? You can read about Petrus Damaseb here and here
12.30pm: So the pieces are being placed on the board. Here's Matt Scott in Zurich: "MBH has come in to Fifa House in the back seat of a large black limo to face Petrus Damaseb's ethics committee."
12.22pm: Today is all about a Fifa meeting. And thanks to Fifa.com, you can re-live the best bits (no, really) of Fifa meetings past. Will this week's bunfight make it on to that list? Who knows. Yes, this does smack of filler, doesn't it. Only four hours 38 minutes to go!
12.06pm: The ever excellent Paul Hayward's view:
In their official literature, Fifa kindly offer a list of the honours bestowed on President Sepp Blatter for his efforts to make the world a better place. On his wanderings, the supreme leader has picked up a knighthood from the Sultanate of Pahang, the Medalla al Mrito Deportivo from Bolivia, the French Legion of Honour, the Dove of Geneva and countless honorary doctorates. The scroll is longer even than the charge sheet confronting Fifa officials on Sunday in Zurich, where Blatter, his presidential rival Mohamed bin Hammam and the ubiquitous Jack Warner are among those up before the world governing body's Ethics Committee itse! lf incre asingly an example of Orwellian doublespeak.
All across the globe certainly in the Arab states the cult of the leader is under attack. But Fifa still manage to mimic the kind of hilltop state employed by the Marx Brothers in Duck Soup. Yet Fifa are not Freedonia and they are not bankrupt: Groucho's big problem, as head of state. Blatter and his committees sit on reserves of $1.28bn and emote obsessively about spreading this largesse around the five continents, even though no one seems able to say clearly where all the money ends up.
In his mission statement, headed "Fifa Brand Our commitment" (note the word brand), Blatter makes a "promise" "For the Games, For the World". He says: "The world is a place rich in natural beauty and cultural diversity, but also one where many are still deprived of their basic rights. Fifa now have an even greater responsibility to reach out and touch the world, using football as a symbol of hope and integration."
Right now the world would probably rather not be "touched" by Fifa.
11.55am: Franz Beckenbauer has offered Uncle Sepp his support: "He did a wonderful job," the former Germany captain told Radio 5 Live. "It's not easy. Fifa is like the United Nations - we have 208 members. It's not an easy to handle, but I think Blatter and his staff are doing a wonderful job." 'A wonderful job'? Really?
11.48am: The big news this morning is that Mohamed Bin Hammam has withdrawn from the presidential race. Here's Matt Scott, in Zurich:
Mohamed bin Hammam has withdrawn from the race to become the next Fifa president and has vowed to clear his name when he appears before the body's ethics committee.
The president of the Asian Football Confederation is facing bribery allegations, alongside the Fifa vice-president Jack Warner, while the organisation's president, Sepp Blatter, is being investigated for! knowing about alleged bribery. Bin Hammam's decision to pull out of the election means Blatter is unopposed in his attempt to secure a fourth term as the head of world football in Wednesday's vote.
Bin Hammam said: "I pray that my withdrawal will not be tied to the investigation held by the Fifa ethics committee as I will appear before the ethics committee to clear my name from the baseless allegations that have been made against me.
"I promise those who stood by me that I will walk with my head held high and will continue to fight for the good of the game.
"I have a special thank you to my friend and colleague Jack Warner for his unlimited support. I am sorry to see that he has to suffer because of me, but I am promising him that I will be with him all the way through thick and thin.
"I look forward to working closely with my colleagues to restore Fifa's reputation to what it should be a protector of the game that has credibility through honesty, transparency and accountability. It saddens me that standing up for the causes I believed in has come at a great price the degradation of Fifa's reputation. This is not what I had in mind for Fifa and this is unacceptable.
"I cannot allow the game that I love to be dragged more and more in the mud because of competition between two individuals. The game itself and the people who love it around the world must come first. It is for this reason that I announce my withdrawal from the presidential election."
Bin Hammam's withdrawal is only one hurdle for Blatter to overcome in his attempt to extend his tenure into a fourth term. The corruption allegations that have engulfed world football and destroyed Bin Hammam's candidacy also threaten him: like the Qatari challenger, he faces an ethics committee hearing on Sunday.
Today's order of play, as it were:
Starting this morning: Fifa's ethics committee meets in Zurich.
At 5pm there will be a press conference where the committee's findings will be ! revealed .
As a grandiose Fifa statement today explains:
Fifa vice-president Jack Warner, executive committee member Mohamed bin Hammam, as well as Caribbean Football Union officials Debbie Minguell and Jason Sylvester, have been invited to attend a hearing by the Fifa ethics committee at the home of Fifa in Zurich on the same day.
The meeting, which starts in the morning, will be followed by a press conference in the auditorium of the home of Fifa, planned for 6pm CET [5pm BST] (time subject to change). The press conference will be attended by deputy chairman of the Fifa ethics committee, Petrus Damaseb and Fifa secretary general Jrme Valcke.
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