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Chung calls FIFA boss Blatter a 'little brat'

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  • Chung calls FIFA boss Blatter a 'little brat'

    Chung calls FIFA boss Blatter a 'little brat'

    Tuesday, September 13, 2011

    SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — Former FIFA vice-president Chung Mong-joon has compared Sepp Blatter to a "little brat," saying he rules the governing body of world football like a dictator.


    Chung made the criticism in a memoir published in South Korea last week, titled My Challenge, My Enthusiasm. Chung had been regarded as a leading candidate to succeed Blatter as FIFA president before being defeated in an Asian election for the vice presidency early this year.


    BLATTER... accused of runnning FIFA like a dictator





    The book hits stores as Blatter prepares to present detailed anti-corruption reforms in October after a year of scandal that has rocked world football.
    "President Blatter is fluent in five languages, has a good way with words and is intelligent ... but I think he is not an international gentleman and he is like a little brat," Chung said in the book.

    Chung, who served as a FIFA vice president for 16 years, accused Blatter of trying to usurp the authority of FIFA's executive committee via his proposal to create an oversight, anti-corruption panel that could include former US diplomat Henry Kissinger and opera singer Placido Domingo.

    "(The FIFA) executive committee is an independent organ aimed at performing the roles of 'checks and balance' to prevent the president from going beyond his own authority. Blatter is now attempting to take away the power of the executive committee and neutralise any effort to check his power," Chung wrote. "It's a similar scheme that so many dictators have used in world history."

    Chung also said that Blatter had unsuccessfully made a series of unrealistic, wild proposals, such as holding the World Cup every two years rather than every four and moving the goalposts to help allow more scores.
    "Those proposals ... only triggered unnecessary friction and confusion," he wrote.

    FIFA said yesterday it would not comment on Chung's memoir.

    Blatter has long been a magnet for criticism, but the 75-year-old Swiss was elected unopposed earlier this year to a fourth term as FIFA president. His challenger, Mohamed bin Hammam, withdrew on the eve of the vote amid allegations that he tried to bribe Caribbean voters in his campaign to unseat Blatter.

    The bribery scandal exiled FIFA Vice President Jack Warner, and two other FIFA executive members, Amos Adamu and Reynald Temarii, were suspended last November after allegations of vote-trading in the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bid races.

    Blatter told The Associated Press late last month that he will announce his reform agenda after an October 20-21 meeting in Zurich with his executive committee colleagues.

    Chung isn't the only one who has publicly criticised Blatter over his leadership style.

    Last month, European Club Association Chairman Karl-Heinz Rummenigge called on Blatter to introduce reforms in FIFA or risk the fate of toppled Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak. Blatter later said he had made peace with Rummenigge.

    Chung, a senior South Korean lawmaker and billionaire businessman, had long headed the country's football association and was a key factor in helping South Korea land the right to co-host the 2002 World Cup with Japan. He is now eying a run for South Korean president next year.

    Chung's late father, Chung Ju-yung, founded the Hyundai conglomerate — which is now a top-tier FIFA sponsor — and ran unsuccessfully for president of South Korea in 1992. The younger Chung was also a national presidential candidate in 2002.



    Read more: http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/sport...#ixzz1XqDiezXd
    Last edited by Karl; September 13, 2011, 10:08 AM.
    "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has."
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