Gary Lineker: Fifa corruption allegations are 'nauseating'
Ex-England striker Gary Lineker says corruption allegations around
Fifa are "nauseating", and has also criticised the role of its president
Sepp Blatter.
Fifa is
investigating claims of wrongdoing
relating to the decision to award Qatar the 2022 World Cup.
"It makes you feel sick, the whole Fifa thing, the corruption at the top level is nauseating," said the BBC presenter.
"Sepp Blatter has run it like a dictatorship for so long and he comes out with so much nonsense."
“We should stand up for what is right. If that means never hosting the World Cup again, fine”Gary Lineker Former England striker
A Fifa spokesman told the BBC:
"Fifa has no comment to make on those statements. The bidding process
for the 2018 and 2022 FIFA World Cups™ is currently being investigated
by the FIifa Ethics Committee."
The Qatar 2022 bid committee, which finds itself at the
centre of corruption allegations, has denied any wrongdoing in the
bidding process.
Blatter says allegations surrounding the 2022 bid are
motivated by "discrimination and racism"
towards Qatar.
Lawyer Michael Garcia, leading the investigation for
world football governing body Fifa, expects to deliver his report on the
case in the first week of September.
However several members of the 24-strong Fifa committee
which chose Qatar have since left their posts amid corruption
allegations.
Qatar's former Fifa vice-president,
Mohamed bin Hammam, was banned from football
in 2011 for offering bribes; Trinidad official
Jack Warner resigned while under investigation
for bribery while Nigeria's
Amos Adamu,
and Reynald Temarii of Tahiti were suspended after trying to sell votes.
Meanwhile, former Concacaf president Chuck Blazer stood down
over corruption allegations;
and South American football president Nicolas Leoz resigned on
"health and personal" grounds a week before a Fifa ethics report accused
him, Fifa honorary president Joao Havelange and Brazil's Ricardo
Teixeira,
of accepting bribes.
Match of the Day presenter Lineker, 53, is England's second-highest goalscorer, with 48 goals in 80 appearances.
The former Leicester, Everton, Barcelona and Tottenham striker was part of England's bid team ahead of the
draw for the 2018 and 2022 tournaments in December 2010,
and revealed that even before the announcement was made there was a sense of fighting a losing battle.
England lost out to Russia in the race for 2018, while Qatar was a surprise choice to stage the 2022 edition.
Speaking to
GQ magazine,
Lineker added: "You have to be careful what you say, but the corruption is just... yuk.
"I was with David Beckham having a burger the night
before the Qatar decision. We were out trying to get support; Prince
William and David Cameron were out there too, and I said to Becks, 'We
are the only country doing this. The whole thing smells; it is a done
deal'."
The former England striker, the leading scorer at the
1986 World Cup, added: "It is ludicrous. I am not against it going to
different parts of the world, but you'd have thought they might have
known it would be very hot in summer [in Qatar]."
Lineker believes one way of forcing reform at Fifa
would be for what he termed "clean" countries to boycott future World
Cups - although he acknowledged that would be unlikely to happen.
"It is such a shame because it is a massive sport and
means so much to so many people," he said. "England are too straight in a
way - and I am not saying that as a criticism.
"We should stand up for what is right and if that means never hosting the World Cup again, fine.
"The only way it might change is for the clean
countries to turn around and say 'we are not taking part in your
tournaments'. But I can't see it happening. There is too much at stake."
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