This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/03/sports/soccer/sepp-blatter-to-resign-as-fifa-president.html

The article has changed 8 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 4 Version 5
Sepp Blatter, Under Investigation, to Resign as FIFA President Sepp Blatter, Under Investigation, to Resign as FIFA President
(about 4 hours later)
Sepp Blatter, who was re-elected last week for a fifth term as president of world soccer’s governing body, said Tuesday that he would resign his position as law enforcement officials confirmed that he was a focus of a federal corruption investigation. Sepp Blatter, who led world soccer’s governing body for 17 years and who was regarded as one of the most powerful people in global sports, said Tuesday that he would resign his position, making his announcement in Zurich even as law enforcement officials in the United States confirmed that he was a focus of a federal corruption investigation.
Mr. Blatter had for days tried to distance himself from the controversy, but several United States officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that in their efforts to build a case against Mr. Blatter they were hoping to win the cooperation of some of the FIFA officials now under indictment and work their way up the organization.Mr. Blatter had for days tried to distance himself from the controversy, but several United States officials, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said that in their efforts to build a case against Mr. Blatter they were hoping to win the cooperation of some of the FIFA officials now under indictment and work their way up the organization.
In a short speech delivered at the headquarters of FIFA, which oversees global soccer, Mr. Blatter said that “FIFA needs a profound restructuring” and that he had decided to step away from the organization for which he had worked in various positions for 40 years. Mr. Blatter, 79, who spoke in French, then referred to his recent re-election by FIFA’s 209 member nations when he said, “Although the members of FIFA have given me the new mandate, this mandate does not seem to be supported by everybody in the world of football.” Mr. Blatter’s resignation speech, which he delivered in French to a mostly empty room at FIFA headquarters, served as a stunning coda to a dramatic sequence of events that began last Wednesday with a police raid at a five-star hotel, where seven soccer officials were arrested and held for extradition to the United States on corruption charges.
Mr. Blatter’s resignation is not immediate; according to Domenico Scala, the independent chairman of FIFA’s audit and compliance committee, who spoke to the news media after Mr. Blatter, a special meeting of FIFA’s member nations will be called to elect a new president. According to FIFA’s rules, there must be at least four months’ notice given to members for such a meeting, so Mr. Scala indicated that the likely window for a new election is from December 2015 to March 2016. The arrests were followed by a detailed explanation by United States Justice Department officials on their investigation into FIFA. And from there came an initial dismissal by FIFA of the widespread nature of the charges; a defiant Mr. Blatter winning re-election to a fifth four-year term as president and his claiming that he would pilot FIFA’s battered boat “to shore”; a linking by United States officials of Mr. Blatter’s top deputy to a series of payments that are believed to be bribes; and, finally, just before 7 p.m. Central European Time on Tuesday, Mr. Blatter’s announcement that he would step down from the organization he has served, in various roles, for 40 years.
Mr. Blatter will continue his duties in the meantime, but will focus on a program of reform that he said would be driven by Mr. Scala. “FIFA needs a profound restructuring,” Mr. Blatter said. Referring to his re-election, he then added: “Although the members of FIFA have given me the new mandate, this mandate does not seem to be supported by everybody in the world of football.”
After finishing his prepared remarks, Mr. Blatter walked off the dais and disappeared through a door without taking questions from the few reporters who were able to attend the speech, which was given on short notice. Mr. Blatter’s face was grim, a sharp change from the demeanor he showed just days earlier when he brashly responded to a question about resigning with incredulity. “Why would I step down?” he said then. “That would mean I recognize that I did wrong.”
Given Mr. Blatter’s sudden, and unexpected, change of heart, soccer officials around the world were left with two overarching questions on Tuesday night: First, what changed between Friday and Tuesday to persuade Mr. Blatter to resign? And, with his departure from the body that oversees the world’s most popular sport, what will happen next to both him and the organization?
The second question has a clearer answer. Mr. Blatter’s resignation is not immediate. According to Domenico Scala, the independent chairman of FIFA’s audit and compliance committee, a special meeting of FIFA’s member nations will be called to elect a new president. According to FIFA’s rules, members must be given at least four months’ notice for such a meeting, so Mr. Scala indicated that the probable window for an election is between December 2015 and March 2016.
Mr. Blatter will continue his duties in the interim, and in his speech he said he would use his remaining time to focus on a program of reform, which would be directed by Mr. Scala.
The first question, however — as to what convinced Mr. Blatter to leave — is more complex. While Mr. Blatter has not been directly implicated in any criminal cases, the disclosure that law enforcement officials in the United States are targeting him speaks to the legal vulnerability he may be facing.
A high-ranking soccer official said Mr. Blatter had been advised by his legal counsel that continuing in his current position could make defending him against possible future prosecution more difficult.
The soccer official, speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, said in particular there were concerns about Mr. Blatter, as president, needing to make public comments on either the continuing Justice Department investigation or a separate investigation by Swiss authorities into allegations of improprieties during the awarding of the hosting rights for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments. While such comments might be considered the norm for an organization’s leader, the official said, in this instance they could create additional legal problems for Mr. Blatter.
The soccer official added that pressure on Mr. Blatter from soccer’s corporate partners, as well as from various FIFA members, increased considerably over the weekend as it became clear that the Justice Department indictment was not just looking at corruption within Concacaf, the regional governing body overseeing soccer in North America, Central America and the Caribbean.
Initially, much of the public focus of the investigation was on Concacaf’s role, and FIFA officials, including Blatter, portrayed the arrested officials as rogues. But The New York Times on Monday, based on information from several United States officials and others briefed on the case, linked Mr. Blatter’s top deputy, Jérôme Valcke, to a series of payments that are believed to be bribes connected to South Africa’s winning the vote that gave it the 2010 World Cup.
Mr. Valcke and FIFA both denied that he knew about the specifics of the wire transfers, but according to the same soccer official, Mr. Blatter — and his lawyers — felt that the current situation had become untenable and probably would only get worse.
Mr. Blatter’s resignation apparently brings to an end an enigmatic career in sports. Born in Visp, a Swiss village, Mr. Blatter studied economics at the University of Lausanne. Later, he worked for the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation and the watch company Longines. His mentor at FIFA was the organization’s former president, João Havelange, who was an Olympic swimmer from Brazil.
Mr. Blatter served as Mr. Havelange’s secretary general before becoming president in 1998. During Mr. Blatter’s tenure atop FIFA, he led a global expansion of the sport’s popularity (and profitability) as well as overseeing an expansion of youth soccer and women’s soccer. He also championed the importance of soccer development in FIFA’s smaller countries, a strategy that perhaps not coincidentally helped him retain control of the organization’s one-country, one-vote electorate.
Controversy, however, never seemed too far away. Whether it was allegations of corruption in marketing and broadcast agreements or concerns over the potential bribing of the officials who voted on World Cup hosting rights, Mr. Blatter often found himself defending the organization’s integrity.
Most of the alleged improprieties centered on FIFA’s powerful executive committee, a body made up of several dozen officials from confederations around the world who were led by Mr. Blatter.
Members of the executive committee — in particular two FIFA vice presidents — were the most significant officials arrested in the raid last Wednesday, when Swiss police, working on instructions from the United States, began a sweep of the luxury Baur au Lac hotel in Zurich.
Although the arrests were not messy — hotel staff members even held up bedsheets in an attempt to keep pedestrians from seeing the soccer officials as they were led out a side door — the impact was powerful.
Both Mr. Blatter and Mr. Scala spoke Tuesday about the need to reform the executive committee if FIFA hoped to make any meaningful changes to its image. In a somewhat strange twist, given his lengthy presence as FIFA’s leader, Mr. Blatter also cited the importance of term limits.
“For years, we have worked hard to put in place administrative reforms, but it is plain to me that while these must continue, they are not enough,” Mr. Blatter said. “We need deep-rooted structural change.”“For years, we have worked hard to put in place administrative reforms, but it is plain to me that while these must continue, they are not enough,” Mr. Blatter said. “We need deep-rooted structural change.”
Mr. Blatter mentioned several components of reform that he found necessary, including a reshaping of the powerful executive committee. In a somewhat strange twist, given his lengthy presence as FIFA’s leader, he also noted the importance of term limits. Mr. Scala, in his remarks to reporters following Mr. Blatter’s speech, said “nothing will be off the table” in terms of reforms for FIFA. Changes could include a greater focus on transparency including publishing the compensation earned by the president and executive committee members as well as more stringent integrity checks, a proposal that had previously been rejected by FIFA members.
Mr. Scala, in his remarks, said “nothing will be off the table” in terms of reforms for FIFA, whose image has been undeniably marred by the seemingly constant shadow of controversy. Changes could include a greater focus on transparency including publishing the compensation earned by the president and executive committee members as well as more stringent and uniform integrity checks, a proposal which had been previously suggested, and rejected, by members. “There is significant work to be done in order to regain the trust of the public,” Mr. Scala said.
“There is significant work to be done in order to regain the trust of the public and to fundamentally reform the way in which people see FIFA,” Mr. Scala said. “These steps will ensure that the organization cannot be used by those seeking to enrich themselves at the expense of the game.” Mr. Blatter voiced a similar sentiment, though it is not clear just how involved he will be in any changes. FIFA did not immediately announce Mr. Blatter’s travel schedule, although he would normally appear at either Saturday’s European Champions League final in Berlin or at the Women’s World Cup, which begins the same day in Canada.
Pressure on Mr. Blatter mounted in recent days, beginning even before Friday’s FIFA Congress, at which he was re-elected. Two days before the election, Swiss police officials acting on behalf of United States authorities arrested several top soccer officials, including two FIFA vice presidents, at a five-star Zurich hotel, and the United States Department of Justice handed down a 47-count indictment alleging widespread corruption within the organization. The Swiss police also revealed that day that a separate investigation, which is focused on alleged improprieties involving the bidding for the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments, had led investigators to seize documents and records from FIFA’s offices. As for potential candidates to replace Mr. Blatter, it appears likely that Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, who lost to Mr. Blatter in last Friday’s vote, will stand again in the next election. Beyond that, Michel Platini, head of European soccer’s governing body, has long been seen as a potential successor to Mr. Blatter.
Mr. Blatter was not directly implicated in either investigation, but The New York Times reported late Monday that Mr. Blatter’s top deputy, Jérôme Valcke, had been identified by American officials as a person linked to wire transfers involving bank payments believed to be bribes related to World Cup bids. Mr. Valcke denied any involvement, and FIFA released a statement on Tuesday morning in response to the article that tried to distance Mr. Valcke from the transaction. Mr. Blatter, in his speech, did not endorse any potential candidates. Rather, he focused on what he hoped would be the positive nature of his departure. “What matters to me more than anything,” he said, “is that when all of this is over, football is the winner.”
Early Tuesday evening, however, it was not Mr. Valcke who stepped to the microphone in the press briefing room. Instead it was Mr. Blatter, who just days earlier had promised that “I will be in command of this boat called FIFA and we will bring it back to shore.”
Born in Visp, Switzerland, Mr. Blatter spent time in the military and worked for the Swiss Ice Hockey Federation and the watch company Longines before joining FIFA.
His looming departure opens up a job that will be appealing to many. Mr. Blatter faced only one candidate for re-election on Friday, Prince Ali bin al-Hussein of Jordan, after several others dropped out. Michel Platini, the former star player and the president of the European federation, has often been an opponent of Mr. Blatter, as well as a possible successor.