Sepp Blatter baffled as FA opts to abstain

SEPP Blatter has branded the Football Association's decision to abstain in the Fifa presidential election as "strange".

The FA board yesterday decided to back neither Blatter nor his challenger Mohamed Bin Hammam in the election on 1 June, but to register a protest vote by abstaining.

FA chiefs had all but ruled out supporting current incumbent Blatter following England's 2018 World Cup bid defeat, and last week's fresh allegations of bidding corruption involving Qatar made it virtually certain the board would abstain.

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Blatter queried the decision and said the FA's special Fifa privileges meant they had a responsibility to play a leading role in world football.

He said in an interview at Fifa headquarters in Zurich: "It is a bit strange when the number one association in the world - which is the FA - have two candidates to choose from and they cannot make a decision which one they support. It's strange."

Bin Hammam's own candidacy has been tarnished by claims in Parliament last week that two Fifa members were paid $1.5 million to vote for Qatar 2022 - he played the key role in securing the tournament for his country.

FA chairman David Bernstein said in a statement: "The FA board has today agreed to abstain in the vote for the presidency of Fifa. There are a well-reported range of issues both recent and current which, in the view of the FA board, make it difficult to support either candidate.

"The FA values its relationships with its international football partners extremely highly. We are determined to play an active and influential role through our representation within both Uefa and Fifa.

"We will continue to work hard to bring about any changes we think would benefit all of international football."

Bernstein met both Bin Hammam and Blatter last month and the Fifa president said he believed his message had convinced the FA chairman - but admitted the rest of the board may have other ideas.

"I explained to Mr Bernstein the part the FA has played in the world of football, especially in the development of modern football and the laws of the game," added Blatter.

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"This is also about the privileges of the four British associations given in 1946 - four individual votes, one vice-president, half the international FA board. They have a lot of prerogatives and rights but with these come responsibility.

"He asked me what Fifa could do for England. I said, 'I will turn around the question and ask what can you do for football'. You do a lot for the development of football and especially with the wonderful, effective and efficient Premier League they should ask what can they do for Fifa? I am sure he got the message, he understood exactly what I said, he is on the right way but I am not sure if the whole board is on the same way."Meanwhile, Blatter refused to rule out a re-run of the 2022 World Cup bid vote if bribery allegations are proven after announcing that the whistleblower at the centre of the claims has agreed to go to Fifa to give evidence in person.

The whistleblower alleged that Fifa members Issa Hayatou and Jacques Anouma were paid $1.5 million dollars each to vote for Qatar, according to evidence given to a Parliamentary committee by a Sunday newspaper. The pair deny the claims. Blatter said the newspaper has agreed to bring the whistleblower, who had worked for the Qatar 2022 bid organisation, to Zurich to testify in person but would not be drawn on the possibility of a re-vote taking place.

He said: "This is an idea circulating already around the world which is alarming.

"But don't ask me now yes or no, let us go step by step. It's like we are in an ordinary court and in an ordinary court we cannot ask: 'if, if, if'.

"We are anxiously awaiting for these evidences or non-evidences in order that we can take the adequate steps.

"We will organise and the newspaper have agreed that we will bring this whistleblower here to Zurich and then we will have an investigation of this."