Bin Hammam withdraws from Fifa presidential bid

Qatari challenger steps aside, hours before the start of Fifa ethics probe in which he, incumbent president Sepp Blatter and vice-president Jack Warner are due to answer bribery accusations.

Mohamed bin Hammam has withdrawn from the Fifa presidential election.
Powered by automated translation

GENEVA // Mohamed bin Hammam withdrew from Fifa's presidential election today, clearing the path for Sepp Blatter to continue his reign as head of football's world governing body uncontested despite being faced with its gravest corruption crisis.

The Qatari challenger announced his withdrawal hours before the start of Fifa ethics hearing in which he will answer accusations that he had arranged bribes for up to 25 presidential voters on a campaign visit to the Caribbean.

Blatter and Fifa vice president Jack Warner also stand accused of corruption in today's ethics probe.

The ethics committee has the power to remove Blatter from standing in Wednesday's presidential election, but bin Hammam's withdrawal should clear the way for the 75-year-old Swiss to be re-elected unopposed, as he was in 2007.

"Recent events have left me hurt and disappointed – on a professional and personal level," bin Hammam wrote on his personal website. "It saddens me that standing up for the causes that I believed in has come at a great price – the degradation of Fifa's reputation. This is not what I had in mind for Fifa and this is unacceptable.

"I cannot allow the name that I loved to be dragged more and more in the mud because of competition between two individuals.

The game itself and the people who love it around the world must come first. It is for this reason that I announce my withdrawal from the presidential election."

Bin Hammam decided to run for the presidency after playing a key role in Qatar winning the rights to host the 2022 World Cup.

"I pray that my withdrawal will not be tied to the investigation held by the Fifa ethics committee as I will appear before the ethics committee to clear my name from the baseless allegations that have been made against me," bin Hammam said.

At the end of an astonishing week at Fifa's palatial slate and glass headquarters in Zurich, the ethics committee is scheduled to deliver initial findings at 6pm today in Zurich.

The ethics probe opens days of scheduled meetings involving Fifa's 208 national members before their annual Congress on Wednesday.

The ethics panel will examine evidence provided by Chuck Blazer, Warner's American No. 2 at the CONCACAF regional body.

Blazer delivered a file that sparked an explosive round of allegations, denials and accusations of conspiracy among his Fifa executive committee colleagues in the final days of campaigning.

Blatter, bin Hammam and Warner passed up invitations to attend the year's most eagerly anticipated match yesterday, the Champions League final between Barcelona and Manchester United in London, to focus on their legal defence.

Qatari challenger bin Hammam and Warner, a 28-year veteran at Fifa's high table, are accused of arranging bribes for up to 25 presidential voters on a campaign visit.

Caribbean Football Union members were allegedly offered $40,000 each at a May 9-10 conference in Trinidad, where Warner is a government minister.

Bin Hammam has acknowledged paying travel and accommodation expenses, and conference costs, but denies vote-buying.

Instead, he implicated Blatter's camp in a plot to remove him from the election contest, and fought back by successfully bringing the Fifa president into the ethics case.

According to bin Hammam's formal complaint, Blatter broke Fifa "duty of disclosure" rules because he was aware via Warner that payments had been arranged and "had no issue."

Warner dismissed suggestions that the evidence file compiled by John Collins, a former United States federal prosecutor who is now a member of Fifa's legal committee, could end his career within football's ruling body.

"Why should (I) be hanged now and by whom? The American Chuck Blazer? His American lawyer John Collins? Give me a break guys," Warner told reporters at Trinidad's parliament.

"I will hold my head high to the very end because I am not guilty of a single iota of wrongdoing. Que sera, sera. I am not remotely bothered."

Two Caribbean Football Union staffers from Trinidad, Debbie Minguell and Jason Sylvester, have also been summoned to the Fifa ethics hearing.