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Blatter defends FIFA record, says he's clean

August 25, 2015

FIFA president Sepp Blatter has defended his organization's bruised reputation. In a television inteview, Blatter said he is clean and there is no organized corruption at world soccer's governing body.

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Schweiz, Sepp Blatter auf Pressekonferenz
Image: Getty Images/P. Schmidli

Outgoing FIFA chief Sepp Blatter on Monday defended his record as president of world soccer's governing body, saying he will be missed when he is gone and asserting that there is no general organized corruption in soccer.

In an interview broadcast on the BBC, the scandal-ridden Blatter said he is respected in many parts of the world.

"Go to the world, go to Asia, go to Africa... go to China, ask them what they think about FIFA and Blatter, that's different," he said.

The 79-year-old Swiss said his critics would realize their mistakes and come to recognize the good job he has done as president of world soccer's governing body.

"I am sure people are realizing that the job I have done in FIFA is a good job, it's the right job for the development of football, the right job for education of youth," Blatter said. "If there are people who don't like the organization or don't like me, they will realize they have been wrong... they will realize that."

Blatter was recently re-elected for a fifth term as FIFA president on May 29 but four days later announced he would step down as president amid the worst corruption scandal to engulf the organization in its history.

The scandal was focused on fourteen sports marketing executives and soccer officials, including several from FIFA, who were indicted in the United States in May on bribery, money laundering and wire fraud charges totaling over $150 million.

Seven FIFA officials were arrested in a dawn raid on a luxury Zurich hotel only two days before the FIFA Congress that saw Blatter re-elected. Blatter's replacement is set to be elected in an upcoming FIFA Congress on February 26.

New York Pressekonferenz Lynch zu FIFA Anklagen Verhaftungen Korruption
US Attorney General Loretta Lynch announced corruption charges in May against several high-ranking FIFA officials, though Blatter has not been personally implicated.Image: Getty Images/AFP/D. Emmert

'I know I'm an honest man'

Blatter remained adamant he has done nothing wrong, attributing the scandal to the actions of rogue individuals.

"I know what I have done, what I have not done, I have my conscience and I know I'm an honest man. I am clean. I am not a worried man," Blatter said.

"The institution is not corrupt, there is no corruption in football. There is corruption with individuals, there is not a general organized corruption," he added.

Blatter also appeared to attempt to distance himself from those accused of corruption, criticizing the method for choosing the FIFA executive committee, whose members are elected by the continental confederations and not the FIFA Congress.

"I have to take people, they are not my people," he said. "I cannot be morally responsible for other people," Blatter said.

bw/lw (Reuters, AFP)