The BBC’s coverage of the FIFA world cup scandal has been woeful.
FIFA released a report that exonerated Russia and Qatar from accusations of corruption in the bidding process for the World Cup…however England and Australia were singled out for special attention.
The BBC failed completely to question FIFA’s decision and concentrated almost solely on England’s claimed abuses.
Now that might seem extraordinary considering the background to the story and the well known and substantial claims of corruption against Russia and Qatar.
TalkSport told us that the report was a farce, a disgrace and a whitewash….that Russia had managed to ‘lose’ all the data on its computers relating to the bid and that no emails or phone records were examined by FIFA.
In contrast the BBC took the report at face value. Listening to their news bulletins it was all England, even their specialist sports reporters on 5Live, the ‘home of football’ apparently, failed to question the claims.
We had Peter Allen telling us England’s behaviour was ‘shocking news’ and he emphatically declared that ‘this was an independent inquiry’.
An ‘independent inquiry’? This was FIFA investigating FIFA and finding itself not guilty and conveniently, the two countries who are going to hold World Cups are also innnocent, and therefore the bidding process won’t have to be reopened.
Very convenient.
However that all changed at 12:10 when the man who investigated the bids, Michael Garcia, but who didn’t provide the conclusions released to the world by FIFA, stated that the FIFA report “contains numerous materially incomplete and erroneous representations”.
The BBC tells us that ‘Garcia’s statement, issued less than four hours after the report was published, has reopened the debate about the validity of the bidding process for both the 2018 and 2022 competitions. ‘
‘Reopened the debate’? Well, no it didn’t, or rather everyone else was already asking serious questions about the credibility of the report….everyone except the BBC.
Once again the BBC fails to do any work for itself and relies on press releases by organisations that can’t be trusted….and adds insult to injury by taking a distinct pleasure in laying into the England bid operation whose Chief Operating Officer, Simon Johnson, on the BBC, told us that it was ‘sad that the headlines are all about England.‘…when the real story is elsewhere…..the story “shouldn’t be about the conduct of England’s bid, it should be about the pre-ordained exoneration of Qatar… and this smells of a politically motivated whitewash”
Perhaps the below might explain the BBC’s haste to condemn the England bid, trying to excuse and justify their own actions in order to claim that the bid’s failure had nothing to do with their badly timed stunt …from the Daily Mail 2010….
WILL BRITAIN’S MEDIA BE BLAMED FOR LOSING VOTES?
The BBC and other media organisations were last night blamed for England losing the bid.
The Sunday Times and BBC1’s flagship current affairs programme Panorama recently produced investigations into the controversial dealings of Fifa’s tight-knit executive committee.
Some within the England campaign had claimed the increased scrutiny of such a secretive body could harm the bid.
Japan’s Junji Ogura, understood to be the only non-English Fifa member who voted for the English bid, said: ‘England was eliminated in the first round, and they were maybe affected by the BBC and The Sunday Times’s reporting.
‘England has full facilities and they could hold the World Cup any time. I think England’s media reporting affected Fifa executive committee members.’