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Friday April 25, 2025

Australia denies it paid bribes in Cup bid

SYDNEY: Football Federation Australia chairman Frank Lowy admitted Tuesday the country “never stood a chance” in bidding for the 2022 World Cup and denied it paid any bribes.Australia secured only one vote despite ploughing Aus$43 million (US$32 million) into its pitch. It was competing against the United States, Japan, South

By our correspondents
June 10, 2015
SYDNEY: Football Federation Australia chairman Frank Lowy admitted Tuesday the country “never stood a chance” in bidding for the 2022 World Cup and denied it paid any bribes.
Australia secured only one vote despite ploughing Aus$43 million (US$32 million) into its pitch. It was competing against the United States, Japan, South Korea and Qatar, which was controversially awarded the tournament.
“We never stood a chance,” he said in an interview with broadcaster Sky News, as FIFA grapples with two separate investigations by American and Swiss authorities into alleged rampant and long-running corruption within the organisation.
One of the probes is looking into the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.
“I’m not the best loser in the world. I have nightmares about all the work we did. And we didn’t get anywhere,” he added.
Lowy refused to say whether he believed Qatar secured the World Cup through corrupt payments.
“I don’t want to make any accusations I can’t prove,” he said.
“But awarding the World Cup to a country where it is 50-odd degrees during the games, I mean how would you think it was done?”
Lowy has himself come under pressure to explain how Aus$500,000 from Australia’s bid allegedly ended up in the pocket of Jack Warner, the former FIFA vice president and head of football’s governing body in North and Central America and the Caribbean (CONCACAF).
Police last week said they were looking into corruption claims surrounding the issue, with Lowy saying he had shared what he knows with authorities.
The FFA chief last week said in a statement the Australian money was paid to CONCACAF as a donation towards a centre of excellence in Trinidad and Tobago, but it was ultimately found that Warner “had committed fraud and misappropriated the funds”.
Lowy denied on Tuesday the money was part of a corrupt process.
“There were no bribes in this process,” Lowy said. “I have

no concerns about that.
“The money wasn’t sent or given to Warner, it was a cheque transferred to CONCACAF.”
He added that sweeping changes were needed to clean up FIFA, and urged President Sepp Blatter to step aside sooner rather than later.
“The culture at FIFA is not exactly suitable for a worldwide organisation today. I think that needs to change, as quickly as possible,” he said.
Blatter announced his resignation last week, just four days after being re-elected for a fifth successive term. But he is not expected to be replaced until a FIFA Congress in Zurich between December this year and March 2016.
Meanwhile, Italian police said that Argentinian businessman Alejandro Burzaco, who has been indicted by US authorities in the FIFA corruption scandal, has turned himself in.
Burzaco, 50, was being held in Bolzano, near Italy’s northern border with Switzerland after turning up at a police station with his lawyers.
He was being held pending a hearing later in the day on whether he is formally arrested.
Burzaco’s whereabouts have been a mystery since seven FIFA executives were arrested in Zurich on the eve of a FIFA Congress last week.
According to reports, Burzaco was in the hotel where the executives were cuffed and promptly disappeared in the knowledge he was likely to be on the indicted list.
Burzaco was wanted by the US authorities in connection with his role as president of sports marketing company Torneos y Competencias. He is suspected of irregularitites in the attribution of television rights for football tournaments in Latin America.