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Qatar 2022 ethics investigation to report in September
Photo taken on May 29, 2011 shows Qataru00e2u20acu2122s Mohammed bin Hammam, arriving at FIFA headquarters in Zurich. He allegedly used slush funds to pay cash to top football officials to win support for Qataru00e2u20acu2122s World Cup bid. AFP pic

ZURICH, July 22 — An investigation into the decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar, initially scheduled for completion this month, is only likely to be finished in September, FIFA said in a statement yesterday.

“We expect to deliver our report to the adjudicatory chamber by the first week of September 2014,” said a statement issued by FIFA on behalf of its ethics committee yesterday.

Former United States attorney Michael Garcia has been leading an internal probe by FIFA’s ethics committee into allegations of corruption in the run-up to the vote in December 2010, which awarded the tournament to the Gulf state.

Garcia, who began his investigation 18 months ago, had said in June that he expected to deliver his report by around the end of this month.

When complete, Garcia’s report will be handed to German judge Hans-Joachim Eckert, head of the ethics committee’s adjudicatory chamber, and if he finds corruption, Qatar could face a challenge to its position as host either through a re-vote or other processes.

Shortly before the World Cup in Brazil, Britain’s Sunday Times newspaper reported that some of the “millions of documents” it had seen linked payments by former FIFA executive committee member Mohamed Bin Hammam to officials to win backing for Qatar’s World Cup bid.

Qatar has denied all allegations of corruption. — Reuters

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