Photo of Andrew Jennings

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Photo of Andrew Jennings

 

 

 

 

The things they say...

‘Neither FIFA nor its President have anything to hide, nor do they wish to.’

Blatter press release, 28 January, 2003


BBC Panorama Reporter Andy Davies:

‘A one million franc bribe … is it not correct that Mr Blatter asked that it be moved to the FIFA official who was named on the payment slip?’

FIFA Director of Communications Markus Siegler:

‘If you do not stop now, then we call the security and we put you out.’

FIFA Press conference, Zurich, Tuesday, 11 April 2006


‘I am deputy chairman of the finance committee of FIFA. I oversee a budget of US$2 billion and I have never seen one iota of corruption.’

Jack Warner, Trinidad Express 12 December 2004


‘Lying and deception and bad faith are standard operating procedure at FIFA.’

Adam C. Silverstein, a lawyer for MasterCard in their successful action against FIFA, New York, December 1, 2006


‘I do not believe a Jew can ever be a referee at that level (Argentine Premier League) because it’s hard work and, you know, Jews don’t like hard work.’

FIFA senior vice-president and chair of Finance Committee, Julio Grondona, 5 July 2003. Buenos Aires


‘FIFA is a healthy, clean and transparent organisation with nothing to hide. There is huge public interest in FIFA, therefore we have to be as transparent as possible. We will try to communicate in a more open way so the world can believe us and be proud of their federation.’

FIFA General Secretary Urs Linsi, January 2003, on fifa.com


 

Andrew Jennings

Andrew Jennings has been chasing bad men around the world for more than three decades. The 1980s were spent investigating the curious relationship between London's top gangster and the city's top detective. He made a one-hour documentary the BBC refused to show so quit and, with Paul Greengrass (United 93, The Bourne Ultimatum), remade it in 1986 for Granada TV's World In Action programme. That brought the first award.

 

He graduated in organized crime filming nose to nose with the Mob in Palermo as they exported tonnes of heroin to England and America. This was essential preparation for his next investigation: the International Olympic Committee.

 

Revealing that the IOC’s president was an unrepentant jack-booting, right-arm waving Franco fascist got him a 5-day jail sentence in Lausanne, Switzerland. Blue-shirted Juan Antonio Samaranch denied the photographic evidence, lied his head off in court as senior IOC members and officials nodded their heads supportively.

 

Currently Andrew is the only reporter in the world banned from FIFA president Sepp Blatter’s press conferences. The leader of the People’s Game fears this reporter might stand up and wave embarrassing items from his unique archive of confidential FIFA documents.

 

Andrew’s new book about FIFA is in 11 languages, despite an attempt by Herr Blatter using FIFA funds in Switzerland to persuade a Zurich court to impose a global ban (Yes, global, really!)

 

After 20 years elsewhere Andrew was welcomed back into the bosom of the BBC and the accompanying Panorama programme has violence and bad language – all off the pitch, by FIFA officials and directed at him.

 

At other times he’s been traumatised by Syrian artillery in Beirut, charmed by the Sandinistas, devoured illicit lumps of caviar with Chechen freedom fighters in the Caucasus mountains and been disgusted by a Utah polygamist parading his five teenage brides in a trailer park at the end of 100 miles of dirt track. The sixth was sulking and wouldn’t come out to be interviewed.

 

Andrew Jennings has won lots of awards in Europe and America. He writes for media everywhere, tabloid and highbrow, his television films are shown globally, he delivers polemics at academic conferences and urges journalism students to write investigations stylishly and humorously.

 

Some books . . .

 

1989: Scotland Yard's Cocaine Connection. The story of the strange relationship between London's top gangster and the city's top detective - and how the cop never arrested the crook who organised Britain's biggest ever cocaine importation.

 

1992: The Lords of the Rings was a smash hit translated into 13 languages. The Lords and its disclosures of Olympic corruption and the fascist background of the IOC president changed world perceptions of the organization forever. Published in USA as Dishonest Games. Sports Illustrated lists it as one of the Top One Hundred Sports Books of all Time.

 

1996: The New Lords of the Rings: Olympic Corruption & How to Buy Gold Medals. Top of the UK best-selling sports books list for five weeks and in top ten of all sports books published that year. Translated into German, Danish, Norwegian, Japanese and Spanish. Pirated in Chinese - twice, Hong Kong and Taiwan, and in Korean.

 

2000: The Great Olympic Swindle. The explosive story of organised crime and the Olympics, how the IOC fooled the world into thinking it reformed itself after the cash-and-sex-for-votes scandals - and the secret documents revealing how the IOC spent $2 million on American spin-doctors to mislead a pliant media.

 

2006: Foul! The Secret World of FIFA: Bribes, Vote-rigging and Ticket Scandals. Harper Collins