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Sunday 22 of December 2024

FIFA Fires Finance Director Kattner Over Bonus Payments


FIFA's acting secretary general Kattner attends a news conference after a meeting of the Executive Committee in Zurich,photo: Reuters/Arnd Wiegmann, File
FIFA's acting secretary general Kattner attends a news conference after a meeting of the Executive Committee in Zurich,photo: Reuters/Arnd Wiegmann, File
Kattner was due the irregular bonus payments over a six-year period and amounts worth millions of dollars

GENEVA — FIFA has fired finance director and interim secretary general Markus Kattner after an internal investigation revealed he got irregular bonus payments worth millions of dollars.

Kattner was due the payments over a six-year period from 2008-14 from additions to his employment contract, a person familiar with the FIFA investigation said Monday.

The extra payments were known to then-President Sepp Blatter and then-secretary general Jerome Valcke, Kattner’s immediate boss in that period.

FIFA President Gianni Infantino is seen with FIFA's acting secretary general Markus Kattner after the 66th FIFA Congress in Mexico City, on May 13. Photo: Reuters/Edgard Garrido
FIFA President Gianni Infantino is seen with FIFA’s acting secretary general Markus Kattner after the 66th FIFA Congress in Mexico City, on May 13. Photo: Reuters/Edgard Garrido

“We don’t yet understand why these payments were made,” the person said on condition of anonymity as details of the investigation are confidential. “These contract provisions were not known widely and not to the appropriate officers at FIFA.”

It is unclear if the contracted payments which came to light last week could form part of a wider investigation of criminal mismanagement at FIFA conducted by Swiss federal prosecutors.

“We are not in a position to determine the legality of the contracts,” the person said, adding that “the appropriate authorities are aware of the issue.”

FIFA’s ethics committee is likely to now open an investigation against the 45-year-old German official, with charges of conflict of interest and disloyalty to FIFA among potential outcomes.

An emailed request for comment from Kattner was not immediately answered.

Kattner joined FIFA as director of finance in 2003 from the McKinsey consultancy firm and took the deputy secretary general title in 2007, the year Blatter hired Valcke for the top administrative job of world soccer’s governing body. Kattner was promoted in an interim role when Valcke was suspended last September for financial wrongdoing and then fired in January.

“Markus Kattner has been dismissed from his position effective immediately,” FIFA said in a statement Monday. “FIFA’s internal investigation uncovered breaches of his fiduciary responsibilities in connection with his employment contract.”

FIFA has already announced that United Nations official Fatma Samoura of Senegal is due to start work next month as the new permanent secretary general.

Kattner’s alleged wrongdoing came to light last Friday, the person said, one week after Samoura’s hiring was announced by President Gianni Infantino.

Kattner, a 45-year-old German, was at FIFA headquarters on Monday before his firing was announced.

His exit is unconnected with the timing of Samoura’s hiring and expected arrival atFIFA in June, the person said.

FIFA's acting secretary general Markus Kattner worked with then-President Sepp Blatter and then-secretary general Jerome Valcke. Photo: Reuters/Henry Romero,File
FIFA’s acting secretary general Markus Kattner worked with then-President Sepp Blatter and then-secretary general Jerome Valcke. Photo: Reuters/Henry Romero, File

“This is based on documentary evidence that is information which emerged in the last three days,” the person said, stating that no whistleblower was involved in revealing the case.

FIFA is being subjected to an internal investigation led by United States-based legal firm Quinn Emanuel, which is working separately from investigations by federal prosecutors in the U.S. and Switzerland.

As a central figure overseeing FIFA finances for more than 12 years of Blatter’s presidency, Kattner’s name has been linked to allegations in the American and Swiss cases, and investigations of other officials by FIFA’s ethics committee

Michel Platini has said that his invoice requesting a $2 million payment for backdated salary from FIFA was sent to Kattner in 2010. The now-banned UEFA president got the money approved by Blatter in February 2011.

In that case, Platini had a four-year ban confirmed by the Court of Arbitration for Sport this month, and Blatter awaits an appeal at CAS to challenge his six-year ban. They deny wrongdoing.

Kattner is also expected to be sought as a witness in German and Swiss investigations of unexplained payments between German organizers of the 2006 World Cup and FIFA.

When questioned at FIFA news conferences since October, Kattner has said he has been advised by FIFA not to comment on ongoing criminal and ethics cases.

GRAHAM DUNBAR