Qatar’s
awarding of the 2022 World Cup looks set to come under the microscope
once again as FIFA ruling board members meet on Tuesday to appoint a
corruption prosecutor who will be urged to investigate how hosting
rights for the 2018 and 2022 World Cups were awarded.
As
part of Sepp Blatter’s anti-corruption reforms, the FIFA President’s
executive committee will choose lawyers to lead independent prosecuting
and judging chambers of a revamped ethics court in Zurich.
Pieth’s
group has said the ethics officials must have authority to examine old
cases, after finding that FIFA “insufficiently investigated” some
allegations about World Cup bidding.
The
December 2010 poll of FIFA’s high command has been shrouded by claims
that some received payments or sought unethical favours from bidders,
and several breached bidding rules by joining a pact to back Qatar and
the Spain-Portugal bid.
Russia
won the 2018 rights and the tiny Gulf kingdom of Qatar was selected for
2022 ahead of the United States in a final round of voting.
“We
will want to meet the people who are going to be elected and make it
clear what we expect of them,” said Pieth, a Swiss law professor. “We
must help these people to see that they get the right resources.”
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