CHARTER FOR CHANGE
This is a Charter for everyone who loves football: fans, players, sponsors, broadcasters, those who work in media and who form our governments.
It is for everyone who is of the view that football deserves a world governing body that is free of corruption, mismanagement and self-interest.
It is for everyone who wants to see football governed by people who make decisions and take action in a transparent manner, and who are held accountable in the best interests of the sport and civil society.
And it is for everyone who shares in the community of football around the world.
Football matters. It has the power and capacity to unite the world in a way that nothing else can.
It works at all levels. It speaks to all peoples.
It opens doors and entrenches friendships like nothing else.
It can do this better than any business, better than governments, better than any individual could ever hope to do.
And when it comes together – as it can through football – it is a powerful and positive force for good in the world.
The problem
FIFA is one of the most discredited organisations in the world with serial allegations of corruption plaguing almost its every move off-the-field, symptomatic of a crisis of leadership, governance and accountability.
The Executive Committee’s decisions of December 2010 that saw Russia and Qatar win the rights to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments respectively have been the focus of attention for four years. Yet these decisions follow a litany of scandals that have plagued the organisation:
In November 2014, FIFA released a summary report authored by Judge Hans-Joachim Eckert of a so-called independent 21-month investigation by Michael J Garcia into the conduct of all bidders for 2018/2022. Amongst other things:
Within hours of Judge Eckert’s summary report being published, Garcia distanced himself from the report saying that there were numerous errors of fact and interpretation. Less than one week after its publication, Eckert and FIFA announced that criminal complaints against unnamed individuals had been referred to the Swiss Court – yet no mention had been made of this in the summary report.
A little over one month after publication of the Eckert summary report, Garcia resigned as Chairman of the Investigatory Chamber of the FIFA Ethics Committee concluding, amongst other things, that a “lack of leadership” within FIFA means that its culture will not change.
Our position
FIFA is not a private organisation. The people who run it do not own the organisation or the sport. They are the custodians of the sport for the many millions who play the game and the billions who love it.
Yet FIFA, and particularly its Executive Committee, conducts its stewardship of the game without accountability to anyone other than themselves. The two critical stakeholders of the game – players and fans – have no say in the way their sport is managed and governed.
It is also demonstrably clear that FIFA is incapable of reforming itself. Our view is that the pervading culture of the organisation from the top down is so far removed from being open, transparent, accountable and rigorous that they are not capable of transforming into the type of organisation that players, fans and our communities around the world deserve.
The reform of FIFA into a democratic, transparent and accountable organisation is the number one issue in world football.
What we seek is not complex.
We want FIFA to operate with the same level of transparency and accountability that we expect of our governments, major institutions and organisations. We want FIFA to be free of corruption, mismanagement and self-interest and to fulfil their role as custodians, and not owners, of the sport for the benefit of current and future generations. And we want FIFA to be responsible to the many millions of people who play the game and the billions who are fans.
It is time for a new FIFA now.
The solution
We call on:
1. International and national institutions such as the Council of Europe and national parliaments to establish a FIFA Reform Commission that is an interim time-limited administration led by an eminent person, with a broad mandate to:
a. review and develop the Constitution, Statutes, Codes and operational policies and practices;
b. develop new governance arrangements including governance-related committees; and
c. conduct elections for an Executive Committee including a new President.
2. Governments, where corporations that are sponsors or broadcast partners of FIFA are headquartered, to consider measures to encourage corporations to support a FIFA Reform Commission.
3. Football Associations around the world to support this action.
4. Sponsors and Broadcasters to support this action by public pronouncement.
5. Fans to advocate for these actions with their governments, their football association, the sponsors, broadcasters, media, via social media and by signing the petition at www.newfifanow.org.
The FIFA Reform Commission should be chaired by an eminent person with experience in government, corporations and sport. Other members should include other eminent persons drawn from the Judiciary, corporations, government and sport.
***
Brussels, January 2015
Other language versions are also available: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Greek, Japanese, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian.
It is for everyone who is of the view that football deserves a world governing body that is free of corruption, mismanagement and self-interest.
It is for everyone who wants to see football governed by people who make decisions and take action in a transparent manner, and who are held accountable in the best interests of the sport and civil society.
And it is for everyone who shares in the community of football around the world.
Football matters. It has the power and capacity to unite the world in a way that nothing else can.
It works at all levels. It speaks to all peoples.
It opens doors and entrenches friendships like nothing else.
It can do this better than any business, better than governments, better than any individual could ever hope to do.
And when it comes together – as it can through football – it is a powerful and positive force for good in the world.
The problem
FIFA is one of the most discredited organisations in the world with serial allegations of corruption plaguing almost its every move off-the-field, symptomatic of a crisis of leadership, governance and accountability.
The Executive Committee’s decisions of December 2010 that saw Russia and Qatar win the rights to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cup tournaments respectively have been the focus of attention for four years. Yet these decisions follow a litany of scandals that have plagued the organisation:
- Payments were made by the now-defunct ISL company to FIFA Executive Committee members in return for television rights.
- Members of the Executive Committee caught on tape in 2010 offering to sell their votes for the World Cup. They are both now working in football again.
- The putative alternative Presidential candidate in 2011, Mohamed Bin Hammam, was banned for life.
- Jack Warner resigned from all football positions before a case against him could be considered amongst reports of widespread rorting.
- Chuck Blazer is working with the FBI as a ‘cooperating witness’ in return for indemnity from prosecution.
- Dr Nicolas Leoz, Ricardo Teixeira and Joao Havelange resigned after a Swiss Judge ordered that the file on the ISL case be made public – a move that President Sepp Blatter is fighting using FIFA funds.
- Within weeks of President Blatter accepting a report from Transparency International in 2011 on how to improve governance and management, FIFA awarded its lucrative television rights to a Swiss company of which Mr Blatter’s nephew is President and CEO.
In November 2014, FIFA released a summary report authored by Judge Hans-Joachim Eckert of a so-called independent 21-month investigation by Michael J Garcia into the conduct of all bidders for 2018/2022. Amongst other things:
- The summary report concluded that, despite inappropriate conduct by some bidders, there was no action that interfered with the “integrity of the bidding process”;
- Russia claimed they had “lost” their emails as they had thrown out their computers but no finding – adverse or otherwise – was made against them;
- Spain refused to cooperate at all and no finding – adverse or otherwise – was made against them;
- Contrary to widely accepted conventions on the protection of whistleblowers, Eckert singled-out two individuals – from the winning Qatar and losing Australian bids who were easily identifiable – as “unreliable” despite presenting and accepting most of the information and evidence they produced.
Within hours of Judge Eckert’s summary report being published, Garcia distanced himself from the report saying that there were numerous errors of fact and interpretation. Less than one week after its publication, Eckert and FIFA announced that criminal complaints against unnamed individuals had been referred to the Swiss Court – yet no mention had been made of this in the summary report.
A little over one month after publication of the Eckert summary report, Garcia resigned as Chairman of the Investigatory Chamber of the FIFA Ethics Committee concluding, amongst other things, that a “lack of leadership” within FIFA means that its culture will not change.
Our position
FIFA is not a private organisation. The people who run it do not own the organisation or the sport. They are the custodians of the sport for the many millions who play the game and the billions who love it.
Yet FIFA, and particularly its Executive Committee, conducts its stewardship of the game without accountability to anyone other than themselves. The two critical stakeholders of the game – players and fans – have no say in the way their sport is managed and governed.
It is also demonstrably clear that FIFA is incapable of reforming itself. Our view is that the pervading culture of the organisation from the top down is so far removed from being open, transparent, accountable and rigorous that they are not capable of transforming into the type of organisation that players, fans and our communities around the world deserve.
The reform of FIFA into a democratic, transparent and accountable organisation is the number one issue in world football.
What we seek is not complex.
We want FIFA to operate with the same level of transparency and accountability that we expect of our governments, major institutions and organisations. We want FIFA to be free of corruption, mismanagement and self-interest and to fulfil their role as custodians, and not owners, of the sport for the benefit of current and future generations. And we want FIFA to be responsible to the many millions of people who play the game and the billions who are fans.
It is time for a new FIFA now.
The solution
We call on:
1. International and national institutions such as the Council of Europe and national parliaments to establish a FIFA Reform Commission that is an interim time-limited administration led by an eminent person, with a broad mandate to:
a. review and develop the Constitution, Statutes, Codes and operational policies and practices;
b. develop new governance arrangements including governance-related committees; and
c. conduct elections for an Executive Committee including a new President.
2. Governments, where corporations that are sponsors or broadcast partners of FIFA are headquartered, to consider measures to encourage corporations to support a FIFA Reform Commission.
3. Football Associations around the world to support this action.
4. Sponsors and Broadcasters to support this action by public pronouncement.
5. Fans to advocate for these actions with their governments, their football association, the sponsors, broadcasters, media, via social media and by signing the petition at www.newfifanow.org.
The FIFA Reform Commission should be chaired by an eminent person with experience in government, corporations and sport. Other members should include other eminent persons drawn from the Judiciary, corporations, government and sport.
***
Brussels, January 2015
Other language versions are also available: Arabic, Chinese, French, German, Greek, Japanese, Spanish, Portuguese and Russian.