'They've just become slicker': Why critics doubt FIFA's claims of having kicked corruption in soccer - Action News
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'They've just become slicker': Why critics doubt FIFA's claims of having kicked corruption in soccer

As the World Cup in Qatar gets set for its final match, FIFA is ready to move on from past controversies. But years after a massive corruption scandal, critics say it's still impossible to see what goes on in the dark corners of soccer's global governing body.

World Cup in Qatar dogged by bribery allegations despite FIFA's efforts to move on from past scandals

FIFA's headquarters in Zurich, Switzerland, was opened in 2007 by then-president Sepp Blatter, who described the building as a metaphor for transparency. He resigned in 2015, shortly after dozens of international soccer officials and associates were arrested in a corruption sting. (Fabrice Coffrini/AFP/Getty Images)

The see-through exterior of FIFA'sheadquarters in Zurich, Switzerland, was meant to be a symbol of transparency. But with most of its levels below the ground, the home of soccer's global governing body doesn't get a lot of sunlight.

Seven years ago, a massive corruption scandal led tothe arrests of dozens ofFIFAofficials and their associates. With the men's World Cup final set for Doha, Qatar, this Sunday, critics say the organizationis still keeping outsiders in the dark about what goes on inside its Swiss bunker.

"Wherever you can't see inside ostensibly not-for-profit organizations like FIFA, that's where all the lying, cheating and stealing is taking place,"said Mel Brennan, a former official at CONCACAF, FIFA'sgoverning body for soccerorganizations in North and Central America and the Caribbean.

A decade ago, Brennan worked with investigative journalist Andrew Jennings and others to expose corruption inside CONCACAF. Its general secretaryChuck Blazer later admitted to U.S. investigators that he and other FIFA executive committee members took bribes ahead of various World Cups.

Since then, "FIFA's become more polished,"Brennan said. "As to whether there's been actual change, I think they've just become slicker."

CONCACAF's general secretary Chuck Blazer, left, and president Jack Warner are pictured in Miami on Jan. 28, 2008. Blazer pleaded guilty to corruption charges and became an FBI informant against other soccer officials. Warner faces corruption charges over alleged bribes in exchange for voting for Russia's successful 2018 World Cup bid. (Wilfredo Lee/The Associated Press)

At this year's tournament in Qatar, corruption allegationshave been nearly as notable as the on-field action. U.S. prosecutors have accused FIFA officials of takingbribes in exchange for voting forQatar's winning bid back in 2010, as well as that of Russia, which hosted the 2018 men's World Cup.

'No checks and balances'

FIFAitself says itis ready to move on, touting"extensive reforms"since 2016under president Gianni Infantino,including an overhaul ofits ethics code and changes tohowWorld Cup hosts are selected.

Last year,the U.S. Department of Justice awarded FIFA and other soccer organizations $201 million US ($240 million Cdn) in compensation for their losses as "victims" ofvarious corruption schemesby their own executives and others.

"FIFA has gone from being toxic, almost criminal, to what it should be, a solid and well-respected organization that develops football," a FIFA spokesperson saidin a statementto CBC News.

Qatar's World Cup bid has been dogged by controversy since 2010. Here, the chair of Qatar's bid committee, Mohamed bin Hamad Al-Thani, left, is pictured with FIFA Secretary General Jerome Valcke and Qatar's Emir, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani, in Zurich on Dec. 2, 2010. (Anja Niedringhaus/The Associated Press)

But Brennan and otherlong-time observers believeFIFA and its affiliatedsoccer organizationsstill needa far greater shake-up beforefanscan be confident that the sport's darkest days are behind it, with Canada, the U.S. and Mexico jointly hosting the next men's World Cupin 2026.

"The kind of reforms that would be helpful, that have to do with transparency and have to do with outside regulation we haven't seen any of that," said Ken Bensinger, a New York Times reporter and author of Red Card: How the U.S. Blew the Whistle on the World's Biggest Sports Scandal.

The trouble is finding someone who canregulate it.FIFA isn't acompany, nor is it tied to any government. It's amulti-billion-dollar non-profit one with more member countries than the United Nations.

And, observers point out,it's largely unaccountable to anyone other than itself.

Portugal's Cristiano Ronaldo, centre, reacts during one of the greatest upsets of this year's men's World Cup, when Morocco beat Portugal 1-0 on Dec. 10. (Paul Childs/Reuters)

"There's no system of checks and balances in global football," said journalist Roger Bennett, the co-host of soccer podcasts Men In Blazers and World Corrupt.

"No one understands [FIFA's] processes. They don't have to explain them," said Bennett. "It's been compared to a drug cartel or the mafia, but it's neither of those things, because it operates in the bright light of day, with supposed global legitimacy."

Tracking soccer's money

At the top level areFIFA'spresident and decision-making council, both chosen by its211 members, who represent national soccer associations.

Each member also has one vote in the selection process for future World Cup hosts. Prior to 2016, that powerlay exclusively with the 24 men on FIFA'snow-defunct executive committee. The change was intended to stop hosts from bribing voters,but Bensinger points out it's not bulletproof.

"In a sense, you're only just broadening the number of people that need to be bribed. There's still no outside oversight."

Since 2016, FIFA has also increased oversight of its multi-billion-dollar revenue and expenses.

The organization makes most of its money selling TV broadcast rights,sponsorship and licensing for its international tournaments, like the World Cup, for which commercial deals brought ina record $7.5 billion US over the past four years. Many long-time sponsors, including McDonald's, Coca-Cola and Adidas, have stuck with FIFAthrough its scandals.

The bulk of FIFA'sfunds are distributed back out to national and regional soccer organizations around the world. Indecades past, with little oversight, millions of those dollars weremisappropriated by officials, including Chuck Blazer.

Then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter, left, and UEFA president Michel Platini are pictured in Zurich on May 29, 2015. Both later resigned amid the soccer corruption scandal. In July of this year, Blatter and Platini were found not guilty of corruption charges in Switzerland. (Patrick B. Kraemer/Keystone/The Associated Press)

Outside experts say FIFA has made legitimate improvements to monitoring where that money ends up but it's hard to keep an eye on 211 different clients.

"Many of the national federations in smaller countries lack basic administrative skills, and before you start with the compliance program, you have to tell them how to make a budgetand how to stick to the budget, and all the basics," said Sylvia Schenk, a sport expert at Transparency International who is currently volunteering as a human rights observer at the World Cup in Qatar.

"That's a huge challenge and a huge task. FIFA has started to work on it, and the controls have improved, but still there are a lot of problems."

'Everyone will applaud us'

When Infantinoran to replace disgraced FIFA president Sepp Blatter in 2016, he did so on a promise to clean up the organization and restore integrity to global soccer.

"We will restore the image of FIFA and the respect of FIFA. And everyone in the world will applaud us," Infantinosaid in his election speech.

Current FIFA president Gianni Infantino watches Morocco play Croatia at Al Bayt Stadium in Al Khor, Qatar, on Nov. 23. (Hannah Mckay/Reuters)

Infantino is now standing unopposed for a third term,having survived a FIFA ethics investigation, but still facing a criminal investigation in Switzerland over his dealings with the country's former attorney general. Federal prosecutor Hans Maurerdeclined to comment on the status of the investigation.

Despite FIFA's promises of change, the decision to award this year's World Cup to Qatar remains an emblem of its problems:in the pursuit of money and new soccer markets, it has been willing to overlook human rights, time and again.

So whenInfantinoimploredcritics, on the eve of this year'sWorld Cup, to focus on soccerinstead of themany controversies surroundingthe tournament in Qatar, many of FIFA'sdetractors were unsurprised.

"The Infantino regime will say that they've cleared out the old guard, and the rot is gone. But whether you can truly reform an organization like that is a much wider question,"said Miles Coleman, writer and producer of the new Netflix docuseriesFIFA Uncovered. "I think we'll have to see 20 to 30 years down the line if it's been possible."

In the meantime, despite grumbling about FIFA's various scandals, the teams, sponsors and fans seem happy enough to keep coming back for another World Cup every four years.

"The second the ball is kicked, you forget about bureaucracyand processesand human darkness and you lose yourself in the thrill of football," Bennettsaid.

"FIFA knows that if it just keeps playing the hits, it can push through, and just keep on keeping on."

A fan inside the FIFA fan zone in Doha, Qatar, reacts after Argentina's Lionel Messi scores against Mexico on Nov. 26. (Manu Fernandez/The Associated Press)

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