Temarii unfairly treated by FIFA Committee

By jimbo / Roar Guru

Intelligent, influential and seriously connected. Introducing Reynald Temarii. The footballer turned suave, political heavyweight is one of the South Pacific’s most powerful people, with close ties to the likes of FIFA president Sepp Blatter and former Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd.

Widely acknowledged for reviving football throughout the Pacific region, a previously outstanding public image also included activism over HIV/AIDS, poverty and unemployment.

His bosses at the Oceania Football Confederation even go as far to say Temarii’s “led a life many could only dream of.”

In just a few years, Temarii has set many new precedents; both personally and in the administration of the game.

He became the first Pacific Islander to be elected president in the confederation’s 40-year history in 2004, ending the iron-like grip of Australia and New Zealand.

He was re-elected OFC president in January in a unanimous sign of solidarity from the game’s regional bosses and was rewarded recently when the world body FIFA appointed him a vice-president, the first official from the Oceania region to reach that exclusive status in the executive committee of the world’s biggest sport.

But perhaps his greatest legacy to date has been how he has endeared himself to so many Pacific peoples outside the footballing fraternity.

Temarii is a man in a hurry, who was working around the clock to ensure his vision for Oceania is implemented.

Taking a leaf from FIFA president, Sepp Blatter, a man he has great admiration for and accredits for helping OFC get to the position it is in now, he has worked closely with Oceania’s 12-member nations at local government and non-government level which has helped raise the profile of the confederation and established many new fruitful partnerships.

And his political experience as Tahiti’s former Minister for Youth, Sport and Community Life also comes in handy.

His approach to spreading the football gospel has been to treat football as a unifying force, particularly in Melanesian hotspots such as the Solomon Islands where it is the national sport.

And by linking football development with programmes aimed at resolving the region’s myriad of social problems, particularly youth illiteracy, unemployment and public health, he has won many fans, particularly the top brass at FIFA, who have been impressed with the youthful management combination of Temarii, General-Secretary/CEO Tai Nicholas (Cook Islands descent) and deputy General-Secretary, Frederic Guillemont (French), all of whom are still in their thirties.

Most recently Temarii was thrust into the Australian football limelight as the man who helped secure the Wellington Phoenix’s future in the A-League and the Asian Champions League.

Leaning on Asian Football Confederation president Mohammed Bin Hammam, Temarii managed to get Bin Hammam to back down and allow a five-year extension to the Phoenix’s licence to play in Asia.

And let’s not forget, football is in Temarii’s blood.

He is a former national player who represented Tahiti for over a decade culminating in a gold medal win at the 1995 South Pacific Games. He also spent time in France playing in the country’s top professional football league with FC Nantes.

But Reynald’s meteoric rise through the ranks of the OFC and FIFA and the world of football came to a sudden halt last week. A chance lunch appointment with a British journalist posing as an American lobbyist for the USA WC 2022 bid has changed his life forever.

In what many people claim was a set up to make a story to sell, Termarii was asked if he could be influenced in his voting for the 2022 WC bidding process.

Representing Oceania, the poorest football federation in the world and severely cash strapped, Termarii did not ask for money for himself but said he would be interested in talking to the agent if they could guarantee $2 million US to build a football academy.

He selflessly did not ask for the money for himself or his country, he asked for the money to build a football academy in New Zealand.

But FIFA Executive Committee member Reynald Temarii has now been banned from all football for one year and fined after FIFA’s Ethics Commission reacted to the allegations in the English media of vote-rigging and voting collusion.

He will therefore be absent when the world federation’s executive committee votes on hosting rights to the World Cup finals tournaments of 2018 and 2022 – a vote lost for Australia’s bid, some would say.

However, even FIFA President Sepp Blatter believes investigations into its executive committee by British newspaper the Sunday Times were unfair.

Football’s world governing body has handed out bans to two senior figures and suspended four more after a corruption enquiry prompted by reports in the British newspaper.

While acknowledging the men were in the wrong, Blatter criticised the methods used in the investigation. “I’m not pleased about that because this is not very fair.” Blatter said of the way the scandal was staged.

“But I cannot say that it is very fair when you open traps to entrap people.

“These bans and decisions may not have found total support of all the members of the executive committee, it would be exaggerated to pretend that,” Blatter said.

The OFC has also lost one of its most bright and most energetic leaders.

The Crowd Says:

2010-11-28T14:38:52+00:00

william Sadock

Guest


I love the idea that he is somehow selfless in doing this. Yeah he wont get money directly, but he will never be voted out of office if he can claim that he brought in 2 million US for football academies. Everyone is selfish

2010-11-24T14:09:02+00:00

Willing

Guest


I didn't see World Football News, but Temarii's 2022 vote was always going to be for Australia. The sting involving the English journalists was to do with his 2018 vote. Remember USA had not pulled out of 2018 when the set-up occurred (a little convenient if you ask me).

AUTHOR

2010-11-24T10:28:28+00:00

jimbo

Roar Guru


AF, If the reports are correct Temarii wasn't going to vote for Oz, he was going to vote for the US as was the African guy caught out as well - that's 2 less votes for the USA.

2010-11-24T05:27:50+00:00

Australian Football

Roar Guru


Good article Jimbo... I was watching the World Football News on HD1 on Monday night... Did I hear correctly that this man was going to vote for the USA WC Bid... Can anyone confirm that what I think I heard was true..?

AUTHOR

2010-11-23T13:05:13+00:00

jimbo

Roar Guru


Despite all the latest posturing by the FIFA ethics committee you might be right cpaaa - the final vote will probably come down to who has made the best behind the scenes deals and Frank Lowy is a very astute businessman. But the bids that will make the most money for FIFA are England and the USA. If that were the case, FIFA stands to make an enormous financial bonanza with the next 3 FIFA WCs played in countries with huge numbers of football spectators generating an absolute fortune for FIFA - Brazil, England and the USA. USA 94 still holds the record for the most number of spectators - average and aggregate and the largest revenue generated of all WCs.

AUTHOR

2010-11-23T12:57:22+00:00

jimbo

Roar Guru


I think there are degrees of corruption here and while its a bad thing, its totally understandable and the punishment was too harsh. If Temarii is worth standing down, shouldn't the deputy OFC Chairman be allowed to vote for Oceania in his place, rather than punish all of Oceania and make it easier for the USA and Qatar to win? How is the AFL blackmailing the FFA and the Federal Govt for upgraded AFL stadiums and hundred of millions of dollars in compensation for their agreement to let them use the MCG [which they don't own] for WC games, any different? That is a form of corruption too in my books.

2010-11-23T03:59:06+00:00

Cpaaa

Roar Pro


Those bloody Poms had Temarii set up. Unlike Royal Fergie or those Cricketers which had piles of cash infront of them, ticked all the boxes for a bribe. Typical though, choose the poorest confederation, the one with minimal football infrastructure and the one vote the English bid was not receiving and make the man look corrupt. Reminds me of the lamo Channel 7 stint during the commonwealth games. Journo walking around with a back pack pretending to be a bomber. The funny thing is, this world cup bid is all about palm greasing. how to impress those in a position of power. The book has to be top notch, but its the handshakes with a briefcase that get you over the line. If Australia wasnt such a nanny state, more people would understand that this is just how the world operates, even here in Australia.

2010-11-23T01:28:25+00:00

tommy_doleman

Roar Pro


Jimbo, While I agree that it's very harsh and it's a terrible thing to happen to Oceania and Australia, there's no place for corruption in the beautiful world game. I feel sorry for the guy - admittedly he was set up, but he should have been a bit smarter really being as it's only two weeks away from the announcement. I have no problems with the punishment from FIFA i guess, but I do have a problem with the s-called "do-gooders" like Bin-Hammam and Platini. It's just really unfortunate for our bid though and I'm gutted about the whole thing... James is right - it's tragic that such a massive event in the world will have no input from Ocenia.

2010-11-22T20:45:04+00:00

jamesb

Guest


the stupid thing about this, is FIFA will announce who will host world cups in 2018 and 2022, without oceania having a vote or a voice in the matter. Thats pretty ordinary.

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