Sepp Blatter Was Board Member of FIFA 'Ghost' Company: Reports
A FIFA statement sent on Wednesday night to the Irish Independent claimed that it had established the company to facilitate the signing of licence agreements with its Japanese commercial affiliates, "in particular with respect to the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea/Japan."
- Indo-Asian News Service
- Updated: June 05, 2015 01:46 pm IST
Sepp Blatter, who recently resigned as FIFA president, served as a board member for a fictitious company founded in Ireland in 2001 in order to profit from its tax benefits and to launder millions of euros to the its headquarters in Switzerland, a media report has claimed.(FIFA Scandal Spreads Around the Globe)
The Irish Independent reported on Thursday that Blatter appeared for seven years on the list of directors of the FIFA Ireland Ltd. until its "voluntary liquidation" in 2008, reports Efe.(FIFA Allegations 'Despicable', Says David Beckham)
The paper pointed out that the company did, in fact, have an office in Dublin, but no workers were "directly employed" by the firm.(White House Thinks FIFA can Benefit From 'New Leadership')
An analysis of the accounts filed over the course of its years in business showed that it had a combined turnover of 172.7 million Swiss francs ($184.9 million) from the last four months of 2001 to the end of 2006.(Ronaldo Urges Reform of Brazil Federation)
A FIFA statement sent on Wednesday night to the Irish Independent claimed that it had established the company to facilitate the signing of licence agreements with its Japanese commercial affiliates, "in particular with respect to the 2002 FIFA World Cup in Korea/Japan."
FIFA also stressed that Blatter "did not have or exercise any operational function for this company".
It added that neither the Ireland soccer association, FAI, nor its officials gained financially from FIFA Ireland Ltd., while the FAI corroborated that it made "no financial gain or loss from this company"