Platini loses FIFA ban appeal

Platini loses FIFA ban appeal

December 12, 2015
In this Dec. 8 file photo UEFA President Michel Platini of France is surrounded by media after a hearing at the international Court of Arbitration for Sport, CAS, in Lausanne, Switzerland. — AP
In this Dec. 8 file photo UEFA President Michel Platini of France is surrounded by media after a hearing at the international Court of Arbitration for Sport, CAS, in Lausanne, Switzerland. — AP

LAUSANNE — The Court of Arbitration for Sports (CAS) Friday backed a 90-day FIFA ban against Michel Platini, in a new blow to the Frenchman’s hopes of entering the FIFA presidential race.

Platini, head of European confederation UEFA and a FIFA vice president, had been the favorite to succeed FIFA president Sepp Blatter, until he was named in a Swiss criminal investigation in September.

FIFA’s ethics watchdog reportedly wants to ban him for life and suspended Blatter and Platini while an investigation over a $2 million payment is completed.

Platini appealed against the suspension, insisting he had done nothing wrong and was being unfairly blocked from campaigning to lead world football’s governing body.

The CAS panel “determined that maintaining the provisional suspension for the remainder of the 90 days does not cause irreparable harm to Michel Platini at this point in time,” a court statement said.

The suspension expires on Jan. 5, and the court ruling noted that even if it were lifted, there was no guarantee that FIFA’s electoral committee would approve Platini’s candidacy before the temporary ban runs out.

CAS, however, ordered FIFA not to extend the provisional suspension, as that would “constitute an undue and unjustified restriction of Michel Platini’s right of access to justice.”

An extension of the ban seems unlikely as FIFA’s in-house court has said it will issue a final ruling on Platini’s case by the end of the year.

FIFA’s internal investigators submitted a report on the Platini affair to ethics judges last month and have called for a lifetime ban, according to Platini’s lawyers.

That verdict would deliver a final, crushing blow to Frenchman’s career as a football executive.

FIFA opened the investigation into Platini after Swiss prosecutors said he had been questioned over a 2 million Swiss franc ($2 million/1.8 million euro) payment Platini received from FIFA in 2011 for work done a decade earlier.

Blatter and Platini acknowledge there was no contract for the fee, but insist that their “oral contract” is valid under Swiss law.

The 60-year-old Platini will appear at the FIFA court next week to mount a defense against the ethics inquiry findings.

In a statement, FIFA took note of the CAS decision, saying it “ratified” the ethics committee’s decision on the provisional ban.

With the possibility of a lifetime suspension pending, a victory Friday would not have marked the end of Platini’s problems.

But it would been a symbolic win for the man who seemed on track to become the most powerful figure in the world’s most popular sport.

It also would have left him free to take part in Saturday’s draw for the 2016 European Championships in Paris. France is hosting the tournament and Platini has been a key organizer as UEFA president.

Blatter worries ‘over’

Blatter has insisted that a $100 million bribery case in which he is reportedly implicated “is over,” and pleaded ignorance over alleged corruption by top officials at the scandal-hit world body.

Blatter, speaking to Japan’s Nikkei business daily, also protested that he should have been warned before Swiss police arrested seven FIFA officials in May, and said he hoped to return to his job in the coming weeks.

“It was a tsunami,” he said of the May arrests on behalf of US authorities, which plunged the world body into crisis, in the interview published Friday.

“Swiss authorities should have at least informed me that such a thing would happen,” Blatter said, adding that he was “shocked when I saw, and (what is) still going on, what has happened in the different confederations.”

“I cannot be morally responsible for the bad activities of members of my executive committee when I have no chance to introduce them or to dismiss them,” Blatter said. — Agencies


December 12, 2015
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