http://www.playthegame.org/news/detailed/globalising-football-protecting-fifas-top-leaders-5063.html

FIFA's top has chosen hosts that match its own dubious business practices, but 
it may be too early for them to rejoice. 

Comment by Jens Sejer Andersen, International Director of Play the Game 

With the double choice of Russia and Qatar as hosts for the World Cups 2018 and 
2022, FIFA has killed two birds with one stone. They have shown the world that 
they take the globalisation of football seriously by choosing two geographical 
regions that have never come close to organising a World Cup before. And they 
have chosen two countries in which FIFA ExCo members can continue their dubious 
management practices at a very low risk of being disturbed by questions from a 
critical press or obnoxious politicians. 

For FIFA's top 22, the choices today were in logical accordance with their 
aggressive denial of the well-documented allegations of massive bribery brought 
forward by BBC Panorama last Monday - a progamme that added to the ill 
reputation FIFA had already acquired after the Sunday Times revealed two FIFA 
exco members' readiness to sell their votes. When you compare the exclusion of 
the two light-weight FIFA politicians Adamu and Temarii - who were merely 
asking for money - with FIFA's refusal of acting against the four heavy-weight 
leaders Teixeira, Léoz, Hayatou and Warner - who in different ways actually 
took big sums of money - it becomes evident that FIFA's declared zero tolerance 
against corruption can be declared of zero value. 

Blatter's dilemma is clear: If he tries to topple the latter four most greedy 
FIFA leaders, who constitute his own political basis, he will fall by the same 
axe that he swings over their heads. 

Moreover, the choice of Russia with its fame for opaque corporate and public 
sectors may make some of the creative men at FIFA's top fantasize about new 
profitable business arrangements. In contrast, the youngest remaining ExCo 
member, Michel Platini (55), has called for the formation of an anti-corruption 
sports police because he realizes that football leaders cannot combat the 
organized crime that is digging its way into football. I could not help 
noticing his body language and facial expression on TV when the choice of 
Russia was about to be announced. He looked like a man who was weighed down by 
insurmountable future challenges. 

The choice of Qatar must have pleased Blatter in particular. Not only because 
it was moving to see the very emotional and surprised reaction of the Qatari 
delegation when the nation's name appeared from Blatter's envelope, as if these 
people who at home belongs to a spoiled and untouchable elite, in this football 
context experienced a genuine feeling of humble persons coming to glory. 
Blatter must also be extremely satisfied with being able to hand such a gift to 
the Qatari president of Asian football, his ExCo colleague Mohammad Bin Hammam, 
who once financed the FIFA President's electoral campaign and put his private 
jet at Blatter's disposal, but recently threatened to run against Blatter in 
next year's elections. Blatter's boat will not rock in the desert sand. 

Many things may point to a future in which FIFA's denial and corruption 
practices can continue unchanged. But it is too early for FIFA leaders to 
breathe a sigh of relief. 

The decision by FIFA to combine two World Cup bid procedures has been lamented 
by FIFA itself for other reasons, but it does open up a quite new and 
interesting political situation: We are now entering a very long time span 
until the next World Cup decision is to be taken, a time span in which 
sceptical government leaders and national federations do not need to constantly 
flatter the FIFA top and preserve it from criticism. 

Losing countries like the USA, Australia, UK, Holland, Belgium and perhaps also 
Spain and Portugal may not go out immediately with furious comments about a bid 
procedure that has proved unworthy and untrustworthy. But soon leading 
politicians now face the impossible task of explaining to their taxpayers and 
voters why they have thrown tens of millions of dollars and euros away in a 
game that was anything but professional, open and fair. Likewise, in all 
countries that render strong public subsidies to sport, a growing number 
politicians may demand football to get its own house in order. 

Noteworthy is the growing concern shown by politicians in Switzerland who are 
not delighted to realize that the exemptions that sports organisations enjoy in 
the anti-corruption legislation, are in fact exploited for all the wrong 
reasons. Tightened anti-corruption laws in the home country of 50 sports would 
constitute a major step ahead, although a few organisations might then seek 
asylum elsewhere.  

While Russia and Qatar have the right to celebrate for some time, a much larger 
number of countries will enter into a mood of sombre reflection, fully aware 
that the reputation of FIFA is perhaps irreparably broken. On a daily basis and 
with no World Cup in sight on the horizon, what do we then need FIFA for? We 
need football, yes, playful children on a grass field, yes, chanting fan 
crowds, yes. But two dozens of elderly men, enriching themselves, lying to the 
rest of us, while claiming to work for the game and for the world? 

It is evident that FIFA depends on the world and the game. But it is not a 
given thing that the world and the game need FIFA. 

Pick a ball, find a friend, and see how easily football will live without them.
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