Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) President Michel Platini confronted FIFA leader Sepp Blatter at an emergency meeting of football chiefs on Thursday and said he called on him to stand down because of corruption scandals engulfing world football.
Blatter refused and Platini made a public appeal at a press conference for member nations from around the world to vote against Blatter for the FIFA presidency in an election Friday.
“I asked him to resign: enough is enough, Sepp. He listened to me but he told me it is too late,” Platini told a press conference.
“I say these things with tears in my eyes. I don’t like it this way. But there are just too many scandals,” he added.
Other confederation leaders did not back his call, Platini added.
Platini said he was “disgusted” and “sickened” by events which led to the arrest of seven FIFA officials at a Zurich hotel on Wednesday.
Blatter is strong favourite to win a fifth term at a FIFA congress on Friday. But Platini said he believed the Swiss official can be beaten.
“Before the events of this week maybe not,” Platini said. “But not now with what has happened. I think that Blatter can be beaten.”
The UEFA president said a “large majority” of European nations would back challenger Prince Ali bin al Hussein.
He called on members from other confederations to also join a revolt against FIFA and support the prince.
The winner needs a two thirds majority of FIFA’s 209 members for victory in the first round on Friday. If a second round is needed, a straight majority is enough.
David Gill of England has said he will not take up his seat as a FIFA vice president from Saturday if Blatter wins.
And Platini said that European nations would meet in Berlin on June 6, on the sidelines of the Champions League final, to review “all their relations with FIFA” if Blatter wins.
“We will raise all possibilities,” Platini said, while refusing to say whether this would include a possible withdrawal from FIFA competitions.
Platini said he hoped Gill could change his mind before FIFA’s next executive committee on Saturday in Zurich.
PUTIN CONDEMNS US OVER FIFA PROBE:
Russia switched the focus of its tensions with America from Ukraine to the football pitch Thursday with President Vladimir Putin lashing out over the US probe into FIFA.
The Kremlin strongman condemned the arrest of seven top FIFA officials, accusing Washington of trying to oust football boss Sepp Blatter after he resisted pressure to stop Russia hosting the 2018 World Cup.
“We know about the pressure that has been put on (Blatter) with the aim of banning the holding of the 2018 World Cup in Russia,” Putin said in comments released Thursday.
“His general position is that sport and politics should be kept apart.”
The arrests Wednesday in Zurich two days ahead of a FIFA presidential vote was “clearly an attempt to block the reelection of Blatter,” Putin said, alleging the US was trying to “spread its jurisdiction to other countries”.
Putin has made opposing what he portrays as US meddling in the world a key plank of his foreign policy and uses claims he is checking American expansionism to bolster his popularity at home and deflect all criticism.
Relations between Moscow and the West have slumped to their lowest point since the Cold War and some hawkish US senators have called for the 2018 World Cup to be withdrawn from Russia over allegations Moscow is fuelling the separatist conflict in Ukraine. FIFA is facing the biggest crisis in its century of existence after Swiss police detained the football officials on allegations they took more than $150 million in bribes. The United States wants the seven extradited to face trial there.
A separate Swiss investigation is also looking into alleged wrongdoing in the allocation of the 2018 event to Russia and the 2022 championship to Qatar.
SOUTH AFRICA DENIES BRIBERY ALLEGATION:
In the meanwhile, South African Sports Minister Fikile Mbalula on Thursday denied allegations that huge bribes were paid to win the right to host the 2010 World Cup, saying that public money had not been given to “criminals”.
FIFA has been engulfed in a bribery scandal that includes accusations from the US attorney general that FIFA officials took cash in return for awarding the tournament to South Africa.
The US indictment alleged that bundles of cash in a briefcase were handed over at a Paris hotel as a bribe by a “high-ranking South African bid committee official”.
It also alleged the South Africa government agreed that $10 million that was due to be paid to South Africa to run the World Cup was instead transferred from FIFA’s funds to pay bribes to former FIFA vice president Jack Warner.
“We as a government and people managing the resources of the South African people we did not share part of your resources with criminals, I am saying it now and forever,” Mbalula said.
“The South African government and its people will not stand in any way of pursuing justice, criminality (and) fighting corruption in sport.”
Mbalula criticised how the US had made its allegations without consulting South Africa.
“We are not and we have never acted in Hollywood and we are not used to these things,” he told reporters in Johannesburg.
“Let us protect our sovereignty and national interest and fight corruption but equally we must not allow to be abused… people seem to cast aspersions on our integrity.
“There is nothing from our side that could implicate our government, as has been vastly speculated we must not become a reckless casualty.”
The South Africa Football Association dismissed the allegations on Wednesday, and cited the role of Nelson Mandela in winning the historic bid.
The 2010 World Cup bidding was confined to Africa, and South Africa defeated Morocco 14-10 in a vote to decide which country would be the first from the continent to stage the tournament.
“When we concluded the FIFA World Cup here in South Africa we got a clean audit report,” Jeff Radebe, Minister in the Presidency, told reporters in Cape Town earlier Thursday.
FIFA president Sepp Blatter has come under severe pressure from sponsors over the scandal, but Radebe recalled that Blatter had boosted South African pride after the largely successful tournament.
“He gave us, I think, eight or nine out of 10,” Radebe said.