FIFA official should answer corruption charges, countryman says

[Breaking news, posted at 2:51 p.m. ET]

(CNN) — Russia and Qatar could lose the right to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup events if evidence is presented that bribes bought the votes to award their bids. In an interview with a Swiss publication, the Sonntagszeitung weekly, FIFA compliance chief Domenico Scala said, “should evidence be present that the awarding to Qatar and Russia only came about with bought votes, then the awarding could be void.”

[Original story, posted at 2:49 p.m. ET]

Trinidad’s justice and legal affairs minister is calling on a former top FIFA official from his country to go to New York to face trial in the corruption scandal that’s struck the soccer world like a dirty slide tackle.

“Trinidad and Tobago is not Jack Warner,” Minister Prakash Ramadhar of the Caribbean nation said Sunday. “It really is about restoring a sense of decency to the politics of Trinidad and Tobago. And we made a call to Mr. Warner to save us all from the infamy that he has brought upon us to go hastily to America and have his trial. And if he has truth to bring, let it be so, so that we can put this behind us and learn from the errors of the past, and move on to ensure we do not repeat them in the future.

Warner is the former vice president of soccer’s international governing body. He’s one of 14 defendants, including nine FIFA officials, charged by the U.S. Justice Department with a total of 47 counts of racketeering, wire fraud, money laundering, bribery, and other offenses. Interpol notified member nations on Wednesday that arrest warrants have been issued for Warner and five of the other indicted officials.

Ramadhar, a long-time political adversary of Warner’s in Trinidad and Tobago, said Warner is inviting ridicule of the their homeland, and questioned why Warner won’t go directly to New York to face charges.

“I am a lawyer and I know the innocent rush to an early trial,” Ramadhar said.

Since U.S. prosecutors handed down the indictment on May 26, Warner has threatened to expose the inner workings of FIFA and its president Sepp Blatter, who was recently re-elected to a fifth term but just days later announced he would step down.

On Wednesday, Warner released a paid political TV ad, titled “Jack Warner: The Gloves are Off,” in which he said he had prepared a comprehensive series of documents on FIFA’s transactions, including checks and corroborated statements.

In the TV ad, aired in his native Trinidad and Tobago on Wednesday, Warner said he would “no longer keep secrets for those persons who now seek actively to destroy this country’s hard-won international image.”

He also said, “I reasonably and surely fear for my life.” He did not elaborate.

Warner, head of Trinidad and Tobago’s Independent Liberal Party, has denied all the charges against him, and said in a statement that he had not been interviewed by authorities and “the actions of FIFA no longer concern me.”

The indictment accuses Warner of taking a $10 million bribe to vote for South Africa to host the 2010 World Cup, saying South Africa was willing to pay $10 million to the Caribbean Football Union “to support the African diaspora” in exchange for Warner’s and two other conspirators’ votes to put the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, instead of Morocco. The South African bid committee has denied any impropriety in the payment.

The Sunday Times of London reports that secret tapes exposing the rigged voting process for the 2010 Cup were suppressed by FIFA and Blatter, until their release last week.

The BBC reported Sunday that documents show three wire transfers totaling $10 million from FIFA to CONCACAF (Confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football) accounts controlled by Warner from the winter of 2008. Then, the documents suggest, Warner used that money for cash withdrawals, personal loans, and to launder money, the BBC reported.

There was no immediate response from Warner to those reports in British media.

In all, prosecutors allege FIFA officials took more than $150 million in bribes to provide “lucrative media and marketing rights” to soccer tournaments.

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