
Audio By Carbonatix
FIFA confirms to Around the Rings that the report by its chief investigator Michael Garcia into possible ethics violations in the corruption-tainted World Cup bidding process will not be made public.
Former US attorney Michael Garcia has spent more than 18 months investigating claims of ethics breaches and vote trading in the process of awarding the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.
He began compiling his report in the second week of June. It was due to be submitted to the adjudicatory chamber of FIFA’s ethics committee by the end of July.
But both FIFA and Garcia's law firm Kirkland & Ellis LLP were unable to confirm to Around the Rings if the report was complete and if it would be delivered on time.
"We have no update concerning the delivery of the report of the investigatory chamber of the independent ethics committee,” a FIFA spokesman told Around the Rings.
“Please note that in accordance with art 28 and 36 of the FIFA Code of Ethics the report will be handed over to the adjudicatory chamber but only the final decision of the adjudicatory chamber may be made public,” he added.
The fact that even Garcia's recommendations for sanctions, which could include stripping Qatar of the World Cup, won't see the light of day opens FIFA and president Sepp Blatter up to more criticism about lack of transparency in the process.
At the FIFA Congress in Sao Paulo last month, Garcia said he and his ethics investigator colleague had interviewed every bid team and all FIFA ExCo members who cast votes in the secret ballot, or attempted to do so, and reviewed “tens of thousands” of documents.
“No one should assume the information we have or do not have,” he said, adding that the “vast majority” material that formed part of the Sunday Times’ fresh allegations of corruption involving Qatar 2022 and former FIFA presidential candidate Mohamed Bin Hammam “has been available to us for some time”. Qatar World Cup organisers deny all allegations of wrongdoing.
“It’s impossible to know if new information will emerge in the future. We are always willing to listen to what people have to say and to anything presented to us,” Garcia’s said last month.
“We will follow our process through. We believe we will produce a report that is comprehensive and fair to all parties,” he added.
Garcia’s report will go directly to FIFA’s ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckhart, who is charged with reviewing the recommendations and handing down any sanctions for individuals or bidding nations. He will need time to examine the report and is not expected to make his judgements public until August or September.
Last month, Russia 2018 World Cup chief executive Alexey Sorokin told Around the Rings in Sao Paulo that he was confident Garcia would clear Russia of any ethics violations linked to the World Cup bidding process.
“We are quite confident about the outcome. We know that our bid was transparent, clean. We are not alarmed or concerned or anything,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Twins marry twins in joyous Nigerian joint wedding
38 minutes -
Start him or drop Him: The Jordan Ayew dilemma Queiroz cannot avoid
42 minutes -
Forms Capital Limited partners with Hack54 to advance digital finance innovation and youth empowerment
52 minutes -
UBA Ghana launches World Cup & Summer Travel campaign with exclusive 15% discounts on Brussels Airlines
59 minutes -
Adwoa Safo was target of assassination plot – Family Spokesperson alleges
2 hours -
NADMO appeals to Ibrahim Mahama to dredge rivers as flooding worsens in Samreboi
2 hours -
Speed up work – Contractors on Takoradi-Cape Coast highway dualisation told
2 hours -
BOST Energies refutes claims of fuel contamination at Kumasi Depot
2 hours -
NPP cautions constituency executive aspirants against cash payments as nominations open
2 hours -
Ghana can surpass $15bn in export earnings by 2030 – FAGE president
2 hours -
BoG demystifies central bank operations, exchange rates and reserves
2 hours -
NPP must engage Kennedy Agyapong through dialogue, says Kwadwo Poku Nsafoah
2 hours -
CARE Ghana calls for Ghana Card to become sole ID for voting
2 hours -
NPP opens constituency executive nominations
2 hours -
Vigilance, positive defiance key to environmental protection – Asiedu Nketia
2 hours