Former UEFA president Michel Platini has claimed that FIFA and a 'Swiss mafia' conspired to derail his presidential bid through false corruption charges. Speaking at Italy's Criminal Justice Festival in Sassuolo, he reflected on his decade-long legal battle and recent acquittal. Platini described the ordeal as a deliberate effort to destroy his reputation and prevent reforms.
Michel Platini, the former UEFA president and France international, reignited his criticisms of FIFA during a speech at Italy's Criminal Justice Festival in Sassuolo. Acquitted of all charges last August by the Swiss Federal Criminal Court, Platini ended a legal saga that began in 2015 over a 2 million Swiss franc payment he received from then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter. The investigation led to a four-year ban from football-related activities, effectively ending his chances of succeeding Blatter as FIFA president.
"FIFA massacred me, the journalists massacred me," Platini said, recounting the difficulty of proving his innocence. "It wasn’t easy. The hardest thing is that no one believes you. Making everyone understand that you’re innocent is incredibly hard." He revealed receiving 150 letters of support from federation presidents before the scandal, insisting the accusations were timed to block his candidacy. "Everyone wanted me when Blatter decided not to run again. They thought they’d make me lose everything, especially my reputation."
Platini targeted what he called a 'Swiss mafia' influencing football's legal structures, including the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), which receives a million euros annually from FIFA. "Sporting justice is a scandal," he declared. "It’s a Swiss mafia where the sports tribunal is the armed wing of FIFA’s executives for making decisions." He compared his experience to the Dreyfus affair, stating, "Am I the Dreyfus of sport? Well, yes. Indeed, that’s true." Platini believes FIFA feared his potential reforms, as police questioned him during a 2015 Executive Committee meeting.
Despite refusing financial compensation and expressing some bitterness, the 69-year-old hinted at a possible return to governance, focused on empowering players. "Return? Yes, it could be," he said. "Football doesn’t belong to the executives or the lawyers. It belongs to those who play it, who love it." His comments highlight ongoing concerns about transparency in football's governing bodies.