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Blatter claims role in trying to remove African president

'The camera's here, Mr President...' Barack Obama, Sepp Blatter and former FIFA vice-president Jack Warner, who was later indicted by the US for wire fraud, racketeering and money laundering, in the Oval Office in 2009 Keystone

Disgraced former FIFA president Sepp Blatter was asked by the Swiss foreign ministry last year to help persuade an African president to leave office. 

Blatter offered Burundi president Pierre Nkurunziza an ambassador’s role in world football as the nation fell into violent turmoil, according to his new book, which was launched on Thursday. The intervention was supported by the United States, he claims. 

After Nkurunziza said last April that he wanted an unconstitutional third presidential term, a bloody military coup failed to remove him. Blatter, who resigned in June days after being elected for a fifth presidential term, said his offer to Nkurunziza followed an approach by Yves Rossier, the state secretary of the foreign ministry. 

“I proposed to the president [Nkurunziza], who is a big football fan, in front of witnesses that if it would be an advantage for his country and him, FIFA could deploy him as an ambassador for football in Africa or in the whole world,” Blatter is quoted saying in an interview section of the 300-page book. 

“Unfortunately, that never happened,” he said of the offer, which was rejected. 

Nkurunziza then won a disputed election in July, and continues to lead his troubled nation. 

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On Thursday, the Swiss ministry confirmed there was contact between Blatter and Rossier. 

“The intention was to contribute to a peaceful solution in order to prevent the current crisis in Burundi,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that Switzerland “never asked president Nkurunziza not to run for the office of president again”. 

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Sepp Blatter, president of FIFA

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Sepp Blatter, no stranger to controversy

This content was published on Joseph Blatter, known to everyone as Sepp, was born in a poor family 1936, in Visp in canton Valais. He started working for FIFA in 1975 as director of development programmes. In 1981 he was appointed general secretary, becoming the loyal collaborator of the-then director Joao Havelange.  When Blatter was elected FIFA president in 1998,…

Read more: Sepp Blatter, no stranger to controversy

Scandal-ridden history 

Blatter’s picture-led book reflects on his 41 years at scandal-hit FIFA, which ended in February. It includes photographs of Blatter with US President Barack Obama, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Pope Francis. 

The book had been scheduled for release before the February 26 election to replace Blatter as FIFA president, but was delayed. 

Blatter is awaiting an appeal hearing date at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) to challenge a six-year ban from football by FIFA. He was suspended for a financial conflict of interest over a payment given to Michel Platini, who was then president of European football’s governing body UEFA. Platini goes to CAS on April 29 to appeal against his six-year ban. 

Blatter is the subject of a Swiss criminal investigation over the payment and for approving the sale of undervalued World Cup television rights for the Caribbean. That deal benefited former FIFA vice-president Jack Warner, who appears in the book in the photograph of Blatter with Obama at the White House in 2009. 

The FIFA election was won by former UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino, whom Blatter says in the book once applied for a job “without success” at an unspecified date in the FIFA legal department.

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