Former
German Football Association president Wolfgang Niersbach has been handed
a one-year ban from all football-related activities by FIFA's ethics
committee.
The
65-year-old spent over three years as head of the German FA (DFB)
before stepping down after reports surfaced around alleged bribery
taking place for the award of the 2006 World Cup to Germany.
Proceedings
against Niersbach, who is a current FIFA council member, opened earlier
this year and he has now been hit with an immediate 12-month suspension
from the game after the ethics committee found he has 'failed to report
findings about possible misconduct concerning the awarding of the 2006
FIFA World Cup' - for which he was vice-president of the local
organising committee.
The FIFA
statement read: 'The adjudicatory chamber of the independent Ethics
Committee chaired by Alan Sullivan has banned Wolfgang Niersbach, former
President of the German Football Association (DFB) and Vice-President
of the 2006 FIFA World Cup Local Organising Committee (LOC) and current
member of the FIFA Council and the UEFA Executive Committee, for 1 year
from all football-related activities (administrative, sports or any
other) on a national and international level. The ban comes into force
immediately.
'The
Ethics Committee found that the conduct of Mr Niersbach as former
President of the DFB and Vice-President of the 2006 FIFA World Cup LOC
and current member of the FIFA Council and the UEFA Executive Committee
constituted a violation of article 18 (Duty of disclosure, cooperation
and reporting) and article 19 (Conflicts of interest) of the FCE.
'In
consequence, Mr Niersbach has been banned for 1 year from all
football-related activities and shall bear the costs of the
proceedings.'
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