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Fifa corruption: Blatter deputy Jerome Valcke denies payments | Fifa corruption: Blatter deputy Jerome Valcke denies payments |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Fifa president Sepp Blatter's top deputy has denied allegations that he is the high-ranking official who made key payments in a bribery scandal engulfing world football. | Fifa president Sepp Blatter's top deputy has denied allegations that he is the high-ranking official who made key payments in a bribery scandal engulfing world football. |
The New York Times and other media named Jerome Valcke as the person responsible for a $10m (£6m) transfer of funds cited in a US indictment. | The New York Times and other media named Jerome Valcke as the person responsible for a $10m (£6m) transfer of funds cited in a US indictment. |
A letter has emerged apparently linking Mr Valcke to the payment. | |
But Fifa has strongly denied that Mr Valcke or other managers were involved. | |
Mr Valcke is not under indictment and prosecutors have not accused him of wrongdoing. | |
Last Wednesday, world football was rocked when seven senior Fifa officials were detained at an annual convention in Zurich, among 14 people indicted by US prosecutors. | Last Wednesday, world football was rocked when seven senior Fifa officials were detained at an annual convention in Zurich, among 14 people indicted by US prosecutors. |
Mr Blatter is not one of the accused. He went on to win re-election for a fifth term as Fifa president, extending his 16-year reign. | Mr Blatter is not one of the accused. He went on to win re-election for a fifth term as Fifa president, extending his 16-year reign. |
On Monday, Mr Valcke announced that he would not be attending the opening of the Women's World Cup in Canada on 6 June as planned - a move that correspondents called "highly unusual". | On Monday, Mr Valcke announced that he would not be attending the opening of the Women's World Cup in Canada on 6 June as planned - a move that correspondents called "highly unusual". |
Warner 'bribe' | Warner 'bribe' |
The claims about Mr Valcke concern a corruption case being investigated by US authorities - the alleged payment of bribes over South Africa's bid to host the 2010 World Cup. | |
Prosecutors allege that a $10m payment made by Fifa to accounts controlled by former Fifa vice president Jack Warner constituted a bribe to Mr Warner in exchange for his support for the South African bid. | |
The bribe was promised in 2004, as Fifa considered the bid, but in the years afterwards South Africa was unable to pay, the indictment says. | The bribe was promised in 2004, as Fifa considered the bid, but in the years afterwards South Africa was unable to pay, the indictment says. |
So in 2008 Fifa diverted funds that would have gone to South Africa in support of the tournament, and itself made the payment to a group controlled by Mr Warner. Mr Warner took much of that money, prosecutors say, for his personal use. | |
He is among those facing US charges, but denies them all. | |
Unnamed US officials and well-placed sources told the New York Times, Wall St Journal and Reuters news agency that the unidentified "high-ranking official" alleged in paragraph 192 of the indictment to have "caused" the payments was Mr Valcke, Fifa's secretary general. | Unnamed US officials and well-placed sources told the New York Times, Wall St Journal and Reuters news agency that the unidentified "high-ranking official" alleged in paragraph 192 of the indictment to have "caused" the payments was Mr Valcke, Fifa's secretary general. |
Mr Valcke is not named as a defendant and the indictment does not suggest the official knew the money was allegedly being used as a bribe. | Mr Valcke is not named as a defendant and the indictment does not suggest the official knew the money was allegedly being used as a bribe. |
A letter seen by the Press Association news agency's chief sports reporter, dated 4 March 2008, in which the president of the South African Football Association appears to request the diversion of funds, is addressed directly to Mr Valcke. | |
But a Fifa spokesperson told the BBC the letter was "nothing new" and it was standard practice for the organisation's secretary general to receive "all letters and requests to the administration". | |
Payment 'for a project' | Payment 'for a project' |
In an email to the New York Times, Mr Valcke said he had not authorised the payment and had no power to do so. | |
A Fifa spokeswoman said the payment was authorised by the then-finance committee chairman, Julio Grondona, who died last year. | A Fifa spokeswoman said the payment was authorised by the then-finance committee chairman, Julio Grondona, who died last year. |
Fifa says the $10m payment went towards a legitimate "project to support the African diaspora in Caribbean countries as part of the World Cup legacy" - an account echoed by key South African officials. | |
"Neither the Secretary General Jerome Valcke nor any other member of Fifa's senior management were involved in the initiation, approval and implementation of the above project," the statement said. | |