ZURICH, (Reuters) – Suspended FIFA president Sepp Blatter said yesterday he believes that only the Congress of soccer’s governing body, and not its Ethics Committee, can bar him from office.
Comparing himself to a state president, Blatter told Swiss broadcaster SRF: “If one wants to revoke an elected president, only parliament can ask for that.”
In a tense interview, Blatter declined to comment on whether FIFA’s ethics investigators had recommended he be handed a life ban, as they had with European soccer boss Michel Platini, who had been the favourite to replace him as head of the global soccer body.
Blatter and Platini, engulfed by a deepening corruption scandal as the sport faces criminal probes in Switzerland and the United States, have both been suspended for 90 days by the FIFA ethics committee while it investigates their conduct.
Platini’s lawyer said on Tuesday that ethics investigators had sent a report to the judgement panel recommending he serve a life ban. But Blatter, who has been FIFA president since 1998, would not say whether a similar recommendation had been made for him.
“I cannot confirm what is being done. That is confidential, I’d be a bad person if I told you that,” he said.
Blatter, who is standing down in February after agreeing to lay down his mandate, criticised the Ethics Committee, which he had previously trumpeted as a key weapon in the battle against corruption after it was reformed and strengthened three years ago.
“I’m not a FIFA official, I’m the elected president of the Congress,” he said. “If one does not agree with the way I do my job, one has to turn to the congress that elected me,” he said.
Asked where it was stated in FIFA statutes that the president is not a FIFA official, Blatter said: “When you look at the definition in the statutes, it says I’m not a FIFA official.”
The FIFA presidential election is held every years and the 209 member federations each hold one vote.
“It is humiliating for the FIFA president that the ethics committee comes and says, you are suspended and you are not allowed to go to the office anymore,” he said.
“That’s like a police order and that hurts, but it doesn’t kill me. I’ll fight for me and for FIFA.”
Blatter also faces a criminal investigation in Switzerland over a 2 million Swiss franc ($2 million) payment from FIFA to Platini.
The payment was made in 2011 for work Platini had completed nine years earlier, the Swiss attorney-general’s office has said, adding Platini was considered “between a witness and an accused person.”