GENEVA (AP) — Organizers of the
2022 World Cup in Qatar have denied fresh allegations of wrongdoing
after a British newspaper report questioned the integrity of choosing
the emirate as tournament host.
The Sunday
Times said a "senior FIFA insider" had provided "hundreds of millions of
emails, accounts and other documents" detailing payments totaling $5
million that Qatari official Mohamed bin Hammam allegedly gave football
officials to build support for the bid.
Bin
Hammam was a member of FIFA's executive committee for 16 years and key
power broker until being expelled in 2012 for financial corruption
during his time as Asian Football Confederation president.
The
Qatar 2022 organizing committee's statement on Sunday stressed that Bin
Hammam, a Qatari, "played no official or unofficial role in the bid
committee."
"The
Qatar 2022 Bid Committee always upheld the highest standard of ethics
and integrity in its successful bid," the Qatari statement said, adding
"we vehemently deny all allegations of wrongdoing. We will take whatever
steps are necessary to defend the integrity of Qatar's bid and our
lawyers are looking into this matter."
FIFA ethics prosecutor Michael Garcia has received the new evidence to help his investigation of the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding contests, the newspaper reported.
Garcia was scheduled to meet with Qatari bid officials on Monday in Oman.
"We are cooperating fully with Mr. Garcia's on-going investigation and remain totally confident that any objective enquiry will conclude we won the bid to host the 2022 FIFA World Cup fairly," the Qatari statement said.
FIFA declined comment
on Sunday about the reports, which revived calls for the 2022 World Cup
vote to be re-run. Qatar defeated the United States in a final round
after Australia, Japan and South Korea were eliminated.
Instead,
football's governing body suggested in a statement to "please kindly
contact the office" of Garcia's law firm in New York City.
The
law firm, Kirkland and Ellis, did not respond immediately to requests
for comment, or to confirm Garcia's meetings with Qatar officials.
Garcia
and his investigating team have been traveling across the world meeting
officials who worked for the nine candidates ahead of the December 2010
votes. Russia won the 2018 hosting poll.
FIFA
board member Jim Boyce, who joined in 2011 after Bin Hammam was
initially suspended, said Sunday that he could support a re-vote if
bribery could be proved.
"If
Garcia's report comes up and his recommendations are that wrongdoing
happened for that vote for the 2022 World Cup, I certainly as a member
of the executive committee would have absolutely no problem whatsoever
if the recommendation was for a re-vote," Boyce told the BBC's
Sportsweek radio program.
Garcia is scheduled to submit his report to FIFA ethics judge Joachim Eckert of Germany, who can recommend sanctions.
Football
Federation Australia chief executive David Gallop told domestic media
Monday that his federation was in a "watch-this-space" situation.
"We
need to get more information about what's been revealed in the last 48
hours," Gallop told SEN radio. "But don't be under any illusion that we
haven't been heavily involved in all of this for some time now.
"We've
been involved in interviews, production of documents and also following
carefully what's been happening away from Australia — so we've got
people that have been involved for some time now."
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