Reacting to the recent opening of an investigation concerning FIFA President Gianni Infantino’s meetings with the Swiss Attorney General, Rehn said: “First and foremost, FIFA was obliged to cooperate with the authorities and it is important to bear in mind that there were (and still are) about 20 ongoing investigations before the Office of the Swiss Attorney General in which FIFA is an injured party. There have, in fact, been over 40 criminal convictions already, although the vast majority have been in the United States. Thus, the corruption has been cleaned up and the aforementioned meeting was associated with this task. As it concerned the cooperation by FIFA with the authorities and the Attorney General, I cannot easily find anything unjustifiable in it, as long as we are talking about the rule of law and a constitutional state.”
The new chairperson of the FIFA COVID-19 Relief Plan steering committee summarised FIFA’s approach to this unprecedented crisis: “FIFA has worked with health as its first priority, and rightly so. A good indicator of the situation is that at the worst point in early spring, all but four of the 211 FIFA member associations stopped [playing]…. In the name of solidarity, FIFA started to act to help mitigate the consequences suffered by associations and clubs as well as other stakeholders within football. Much due to the fact that significant economical and administrative reforms have been made at FIFA, the Federation stands on very solid ground now, economically. That will now be used to help the sport recover from the Coronavirus crisis.”
Rehn also provided further insight into the newly created Relief Plan: “Over the spring and summer, we have been preparing FIFA’s Coronavirus relief plan. Altogether, one and a half billion US dollars will be distributed in order to support the global football society. I took part in the creation of this plan as a member of the Governance Committee. This aid and the aid system resembles the European Union’s aid in the sense that it will be financed through the strong reserves and first-class credit rating of the institution and distributed partly as direct aid and partly as loans, which are, of course, voluntary for member associations.”
Finally, he concluded with a message of hope: “The newly-founded steering committee, which is a completely independent body, will follow and monitor the execution of the plan, its economic administration, and its effective and proper implementation in all parts of the world. FIFA appointed me the chairman of that committee last week. I trust that with cooperation the world over, and certainly in Finland, too, we will be able to keep the damage to football caused by the Coronavirus crisis to a minimum.”
FIFA