Russia says it has 'nothing to hide' after FIFA bid probe launched
WARSAW, Poland --
After Swiss prosecutors opened criminal proceedings Wednesday into FIFA's awarding of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, Russian Sports Minister Vitaly Mutko told The Associated Press ''we've got nothing to hide.''
Mutko, who is also a FIFA executive committee member and is in Zurich for the governing body's congress and presidential election, played a leading role in Russia's bid and said his country welcomes the investigation.
''We're prepared to show everything,'' Mutko said in a telephone interview. ''We've always acted within the law. We've got nothing to hide.''
Swiss authorities said they are investigating the awarding of the 2018 World Cup to Russia and the 2022 tournament to Qatar. In a separate U.S. investigation, 14 people were indicted on corruption charges and seven of them were arrested in Zurich.
Mutko said the investigations will not hinder Russia's preparations for the 2018 tournament.
''How can it be obstructed? ... We have a contract with FIFA and we're getting ready to hold the draw,'' Mutko said. ''We operated within the regulations that existed at that time.''
Alexei Sorokin, who headed Russia's bid committee and now runs the organizing committee, also said there had been no wrongdoing.
''We have stated that many times during the investigation by FIFA and before that investigation,'' Sorokin said by telephone from Zurich. ''Preparations to host the World Cup are continuing and they are going according to plan.''
Russia was largely cleared by a FIFA report published in December, although it was noted that the Russians had failed to provide much information because they said the bid committee's computers had been destroyed.
Both Sorokin and Mutko said that they had not been contacted by investigators in connection with Wednesday's developments.
Russia's foreign ministry has heavily criticized the United States over the arrest in Switzerland of officials from soccer's ruling body FIFA.
In a statement, Russian foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich says the arrests were "evidently another case of illegal extra-territorial implementation of American law."