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Beckenbauer rejects 2006 World Cup bribery allegations

Franz Beckenbauer rejected allegations that a slush fund was used to buy votes to bring the 2006 World Cup to Germany

Franz Beckenbauer, who headed the organizing committee for the 2006 soccer World Cup, on Sunday rejected allegations that a slush fund had been set up to buy votes and bring the tournament to Germany in 2000.

"I never gave money to anyone in order to acquire votes so that Germany is awarded the 2006 World Cup,” Beckenbauer, a former World Cup winning player and coach, said in a statement. "And I am certain that no other member of the bid committee did something like that."

Der Spiegel magazine reported on Friday that an alleged slush fund had been set up with $7.6 million in euros loaned by the late Adidas CEO Robert Louis-Dreyfus for Germany’s World Cup bid committee to pay bribes to FIFA officials in order to help land the tournament for Germany during a vote in 2000.

Der Spiegel said that among those aware of the slush fund had been Beckenbauer, who was the head of the committee, as well as Wolfgang Niersbach, the current president of the German Football Association (DFB) who was a vice president of the organizing committee, citing internal documents from the DFB.

FIFA, world soccer’s governing body, on Friday said that it would investigate “serious allegations” that Germany secured the 20016 World Cup with bribes.

Prior to these allegations, FIFA was already mired in U.S. and Swiss investigations into allegations of high-level corruption involving the awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups to Russia and Qatar.  FIFA had banned Beckenbauer all football activities for 90 days on June 12 over noncooperation with an investigation into the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bid.

Niersbach on Saturday also rejected the allegations and said he had ordered his lawyers to take legal action against the magazine.

The DFB said on Friday its own investigation had found no wrongdoing in the process of being awarded the 2006 World Cup, but said it was investigating a payment of $7.6 million from the committee to FIFA for a cultural program during the 2006 World Cup and whether it was used as intended.

Der Spiegel said this payment was a return of a loan paid by Louis-Dreyfus to help it set up the alleged slush fund.

Al Jazeera with wire services

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