The air was thick with tobacco smoke and tension. A small clutch of men in long white dishdashas were craning around their host Mohamed bin Hammam in the dimly lit room. Cardamom-scented steam rose from cups of Arabic coffee freshly poured from a fine golden dallah by robed servants who melted in and out of the shadows. No one was watching the football match flickering on the wall. The Qatari billionaire had a lot to get off his chest, and his guests were listening intently. Tonight, like every other night, Bin Hammam was holding court in his majlis, the male-only sitting room of his Doha mansion where local men came to lounge in exquisite comfort as they smoked and drank coffee or mint tea.
These evenings had once been relaxed and jovial affairs, alive with the hubbub of many voices and shouts of celebration or dismay as goals were scored or saved on the giant television screens. Bin Hammam was known by his friends around the world for being generous to a fault, and he was never without company. At the peak of his success, he had opened his home every night to dozens of men who piled into the sitting room at sunset to talk and watch football before moving through to the dining room to feast on Qatari specialities at his banqueting table. His guests gorged themselves on flatbreads stuffed with marinated shawarma meat, vine leaves, spicy kabsa, zatar pie, tabbouleh salads, baba ghanoush and ghuzi lamb, all washed down with ice-cold mineral water.
Back then Bin Hammam was away on football business as often as he was at home, but when he was present at the head of the table, his grandchildren skipped around him and he would break off from the dining-room chatter to tousle their hair or press sweets into their palms. Neither his younger wife Nahed, a beautiful Jordanian who dressed demurely in western clothes and spoke French, nor the older Fatima, who covered her face and had been at Bin Hammam’s side for many years, were anywhere to be seen when the men were at the table. In his glory days, these gatherings had been lively, crowded occasions, with guests jostling for position for a word with their host. Now all was lost, Nahed had left him and just a few loyal friends remained in the majlis.
This quiet evening, only Bin Hammam’s voice could be heard by the newcomer who had been ushered past the football pictures lining the hallway into the splendour of the sitting room, and was now approaching the party through the haze of cigarette smoke in the air. Having slipped off his shoes at the door, the tanned visitor in a crisp open-collared shirt and a dark blue business suit padded across the carpet. He was an unfamiliar face in the room, and the locals eyed this western interloper with caution, but he was greeted warmly by their host. He smiled respectfully as he settled into an ochre sofa opposite Bin Hammam, but something had unnerved him.
It was a few months since the visitor had said goodbye to the Qatari in Zurich, and his friend had changed. It wasn’t that he was any less immaculate than usual. His silver beard was tightly trimmed around his strong jaw and the spotless white keffiyeh his servants had pressed that morning flowed over athletic shoulders. But for all Bin Hammam’s finery and the opulence of his surroundings, it was clear that his spirits were tattered. The 62-year-old was admired by all who knew him for his steady poise and dignity. Now his shoulders were hunched and his eyes were circled with dark shadows. His friend was worried. Did Mohamed’s hand tremble as he reached for his golden coffee cup, or did he dream it? Did his voice quaver as he spoke? How could he be so altered? This man had forged a long career as a captain of industry at the helm of a multi-billion-dollar construction firm, riding the economic boom that thrust the shimmering metropolis of Doha skywards out of the desert. He had transcended his humble origins and surged through the ranks of Qatari society, becoming one of the richest men in a city of billionaires with a place in the inner sanctum of the Emir’s most trusted counsellors. Now he was brought low, and by what? A game.
Bin Hammam’s friends, like his family, knew that football had always been his first love. Now it had spurned him. The man who had pulled off the audacious feat of winning the right to host the World Cup in the Qatari desert only months before was now in disgrace and banned for life from the game he adored. Shut out and consigned to silence, there was nothing left for Bin Hammam but to watch as Qatar’s plans to host the tournament he had brought home for his country took shape outside. In the weeks and months after his spectacular downfall in May 2011, he sat among the friends who gathered in his mansion each night, going round and round the events leading up to the catastrophe, trying to make sense of how it could have happened.
The billionaire spoke slowly and deliberately, but there was one word that almost choked him with its bitterness every time it spilled from his lips: Blatter. The traitor he had once called his brother. The man who owed him everything, for whom he had been prepared to sacrifice even the last precious moments with a dying son. The man whose presidential crown by rights belonged to him. The man who had destroyed him.
Bin Hammam had been a hero in world football before his career was wiped out in one sickening blast by the bribery scandal that had exploded under the Caribbean sun in the Port of Spain, blotting out all he had achieved. Everyone knew the lurid details of what had happened on that ill-fated junket for a host of small-time local football chieftains whose loyalty he had tried and failed to secure. The world had seen the photographs of cash spilling out of manilla envelopes which had surfaced like bloated corpses, bobbing in the warm West Indian waters, when those traitors had turned on him in the days after the trip.
But there was much about Bin Hammam’s demise which continued to mystify even the most knowing onlookers. This was the man who had achieved the impossible by bringing the World Cup to the desert, and his downfall had followed strangely quickly on the heels of that improbable triumph. His visitor was puzzled. Why had Bin Hammam’s old friends at FIFA turned so viciously against him? And why were the young figureheads of Qatar’s 2022 World Cup Supreme Committee so quick to disown their former mentor? Strangest of all, why had this proud man suddenly crawled away so quietly?
The Qatari football grandee denied the specific allegations against him and he was known to be planning an appeal in the relative secrecy of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), but on all other matters he was sworn to silence. So the men who gathered in the privacy of his majlis were the only people who would be trusted to hear the whole story. It was these men who sat listening intently that night as Bin Hammam mulled over his ruination. Mostly they were locals, sweeping into the mansion set back from the hot city street as the sun went down outside. Every now and again, they were joined by a friend from Bin Hammam’s days in Zurich, like the visitor who had entered this evening: westerners who flew through Doha from time to time and stopped to see a man they remembered at the peak of his powers. So Bin Hammam told these guests his story. How it all began. How he had turned his boyhood dreams into reality. How it had ended like this.
All his life, Mohamed bin Hammam had been gripped by a peculiar passion for football. The obsession had kept him up at night as a youth, straining to hear the commentary on his favourite team, Liverpool, crackling out of his father’s transistor radio from a country far away. Football was a lonely love for a boy from Doha in the 1950s, and Mohamed cut a solitary figure kicking his ball around the dusty streets and scrublands. Many of his friends didn’t even know how to play this strange foreign game.
Bin Hammam was born in Doha in 1949 – the same year Qatar shipped off its very first exports of crude oil – when the country was just an obscure Gulf statelet under British protection. This tiny peninsula, which juts out of the Arabian mainland into the Persian Gulf, had a minuscule population of just 25,000 back then. The energy boom was on the distant horizon as the oil started gushing out of Qatar’s wells, but the city had not yet started shooting up out of the desert into the gleaming mirage of glass it was destined to become. Back then, the sandy dirt roads where Mohamed played were lined with crumbling single-storey buildings, the sky pierced only by the minarets of the Wahhabi mosques where he and his father went to worship.
This little boy chasing his tattered ball through the dusty streets wasn’t only marked out from his peers by his strange love of a foreign sport. Mohamed’s wide-set features and tight cap of black curls belied the distant African ancestry that would always set him apart from the pure-bred Arabs who ruled the roost in Doha. His mother was a nurse and his father a local businessman, both of whom had been born Qatari, but way back in the family’s lineage was an ancestor from Africa In this tiny country differences like that stuck out, and being different meant never quite belonging.
Mohamed dribbled his ball along the rocky paths leading up the West Bay and ran along the waterfront, ducking between the pearl merchants’ rowing boats dotting the unpaved foreshore. He scampered up the jetty, with the cobalt waters of the Persian Gulf glittering all around him, watching the fishermen bobbing on the waves and the lighters chugging out to meet the cargo ships on the horizon. The skyline was speckled with the white masts of dhows carrying fruit, vegetables and barrels of fresh water along the Eastern Arabian shores, and from time to time an oil tanker loomed into view – a harbinger of the vast mineral riches his tiny country was beginning to discover. And with oil, came football. Down by the West Bay, little Mohamed would watch with wide eyes as, all along the shore, foreign oil workers fresh off the boat from Europe played his beloved game. He saw how they threw down their grubby flannel shirts to mark the goalposts, divided into teams and tossed a coin for the first kick. He heard them shouting to one another in strange foreign tongues; clapping each other on the back; cheering in celebration when the ball flew through the makeshift goalposts in clouds of desert dust.
Football arrived in Doha with the foreigners who flocked to the Gulf when Qatar first began spudding its vast oil reserves at the end of the Second World War. The country had come under British protection after the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, and its first onshore oil concession was awarded in 1935 to the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company – the predecessor of BP – and operated by a local firm that would become the Qatar Petroleum Company. Drilling began in the late 1930s, but the war delayed its full development and the first crude exports didn’t start until 1949, the year Bin Hammam was born, by which time 5,000 barrels a day were gushing out of that first well.
The foreign riggers brought with them their love of football, and the game they played all along the shore and on patches of scrub throughout the city began to catch the attention of the local population. By 1950, when Mohamed was just reaching his first birthday, Qatar’s first amateur football team, Al-Najah, was formed. It fell to the Qatar Petroleum Company to organise the country’s inaugural football competition – the Ezz Eddin Tournament in Dukhan – in 1951. The Qatar Football Association was set up almost a decade later in 1960, when Mohamed was 11, and when he turned 21, in 1970, the country’s national association was finally recognised by FIFA.
By the time Bin Hammam had grown into a smart young entrepreneur in his early twenties, the country’s fortunes were transformed. Qatar threw off the yoke of British protection in 1971 and the ruling Al Thani family took full control of oil operations, cranking up the extraction of the country’s energy reserves, pouring the massive revenues into the swelling coffers of its sovereign wealth fund and setting the Gulf state on a fast track to becoming one of the world’s richest countries. Bin Hammam’s own company, Kemco, was founded in the same year the oil industry was nationalised, 1974, when he was just 25. With the oil money flooding in, building projects were mushrooming all over town, and the young businessman grabbed the opportunity. Kemco began life as an electro-mechanical engineering firm, with the tools and talent required to help build the glass skyscrapers erupting all along the West Bay waterfront. With each new development that sprang up along the shore where he’d watched the oil workers play as a boy, Bin Hammam’s bank balance expanded. Before long he was a millionaire.
For all that business was booming, Bin Hammam still found plenty of time to pursue his childhood passion. Aged just 18, Bin Hammam had fallen for a local girl and decided to get married, abandoning any boyish hopes of a playing career. Instead, in the early 1970s he took up the mantle of running Al Rayyan football club – nicknamed the Lions – which had been formed only a few years before as an amateur team run out of a two-bed house in Rayyan town. In 1972 the Qatar Stars League was formalised, and Al Rayyan played in its first season. Bin Hammam proved a talented manager, and he would steer his Lions to multiple championship titles in the QSL during his presidency, all the while keeping a firm hand on the Kemco tiller.
Rayyan was the home town of Qatar’s ruling Emir, Sheikh Khalifa bin Hamad Al Thani, and Bin Hammam’s transformation of the shambolic local side into a winning team did not go unnoticed. This dapper businessman with his love of the foreign game of football particularly caught the eye of Qatar’s heir apparent, Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani, himself an ambitious youth with western sensibilities. Three years Bin Hammam’s junior and fresh out of Sandhurst, the young royal had come back to Qatar with all the polish of a British education and big ideas about what his country could achieve. He remembered Bin Hammam as a local boy from his early school years in Doha, before he had crossed the waters to pursue his education in England, and he liked what the self-made multi-millionaire was doing with Kemco and Al Rayyan now.
Sheikh Hamad was a tall man with shoulders like granite boulders and a forbidding military moustache. He hurtled up the ranks of Qatar’s emerging military to become commander-in-chief at the age of 25, and took charge of the Supreme Planning Council, which sets the country’s economic and social policies, in the early 1980s. Qatar was getting seriously rich, but Sheikh Hamad believed it was not powering forward quickly enough. He wanted his Gulf homeland to become a truly modern country. The crown prince was a keen sportsman who had observed the power of football to unite a nation during his education in Britain. He saw the galvanising potential of the game Bin Hammam loved. The pair became as close to being friends as an ordinary boy of African descent can with a member of the Qatari royal family. Bin Hammam sat with his head bowed in reverence when Sheikh Hamad was in the room – but when he was invited to speak, the crown prince listened.
With the patronage of the royals came certain special privileges, and Kemco began to win more and more major state contracts. It wasn’t long before the millions in the bank became billions, and Bin Hammam was one of the richest men in town. By 1992 he had climbed to the top of the Qatari football ladder too, becoming the president of the country’s football association. In his first year at the helm, he arranged for Qatar to host the Gulf Cup of Nations and steered the country’s national team to victory in the tournament.
By now, Sheikh Hamad was getting restless. His father, the Emir Sheikh Khalifa, had presided over impressive economic growth since he took power after independence, but he was a traditionalist who favoured a stately pace of change. Sheikh Hamad didn’t have that kind of patience. Sheikh Khalifa had handed him a growing portfolio of royal responsibilities, including control over the country’s oil and gas development programme, but not enough to satiate his thirst for power. By 1995, the crown prince was ready to make his lunge. He waited until his father was away on holiday in Geneva before seizing control of the Amiri Diwan Palace with the backing of the rest of the royal family. Next, he hired an American law firm to freeze his father’s international bank accounts and head off any countermoves the old Emir might try to make. The coup was bloodless, but the crown prince had shown he had ice in his veins by freezing his father out of Doha. Sheikh Khalifa endured a decade of exile in France and Abu Dhabi before being allowed to return home in 2004.
With the old guard out of the way, Sheikh Hamad’s power in Qatar was absolute and he could begin the rapid modernisation he had been dreaming of for years. Under the rule of the new Emir, Qatar’s natural gas production would soar to 77 million tonnes per year. By 2008, Qatar’s gross domestic product had reached $84,812 per capita – making it the world’s richest country – and 76.8 per cent of that wealth came from oil and gas. But Sheikh Hamad wanted his nation to become so much more than just an energy-rich Gulf statelet, and he knew he needed to shore up Qatar’s position in the world for a future when the mineral reserves finally ran out. He intended to position Qatar as a major global power extending its financial, political and cultural tentacles all around the globe. Property, the arts, industry, media, sport, education – these were the building blocks of a truly modern nation.
So Sheikh Hamad would set up the Qatar Investment Authority to spread $100 billion of the country’s sovereign wealth internationally. He would turn the Gulf state into a crucial strategic partner of the US government in the Middle East, allowing his new American allies to construct two regionally pivotal military bases on Qatari soil and inviting several world-class US universities to open campuses in Doha. He founded the Arabic news network Al Jazeera in 1996 and later established the Qatar Museums Authority which transformed the country into the world’s biggest contemporary art buyer. And then he would turn his attention to sport. He knew that global glory and prestige attaches to no one like it does to the world’s sports superstars. He wanted to transform Qatar into the international sporting capital of the 21st century.
The Emir set about assembling a group of trusted favourites to help him steer Qatar into its glittering future, and his old friend Bin Hammam was an obvious choice to help him realise his sporting ambitions. The billionaire football lover was given a seat on the Emir’s 35-man advisory council – his Majlis Al Shura – charged with deliberating on new laws, economic and social policy, cultural development and the general glorification of Qatar.
Bin Hammam had ascended to the very highest echelons of Qatari society that it was possible to reach without royal blood. Charm, nous and determination had carried him a long way from his modest origins, but he could never escape his ancestry altogether. The other courtiers were jealous of this outsider’s newfound status and as he passed between the colonnades of the vast white palace on the Corniche, he could hear their whispers. They called him ‘The Slave’. However high he climbed, however limitless his fortune, Bin Hammam would always be an interloper in the upper reaches of Qatari society, where pure Arab blood was the only true mark of nobility. He would always be looking over his shoulder; always anxious to jump higher than all the other favourites to please the Emir; always striving for the chance to really put himself and his family on the map of Qatar forever.
By the time he reached his late forties, Bin Hammam was a super-rich businessman who ruled over Qatari football and held a coveted place in the inner sanctum of the Amiri Diwan Palace – but he wanted more. Determined to shore up his status at home and prove his worth on an international stage, he ran for election to the executive committee of the Asian Football Confederation – the body which controlled every member association across the continent from its headquarters in Kuala Lumpur – and won. It was 1996, the same year Bin Hammam joined the Emir’s advisory council, and now he had transcended Qatari football to take a powerful position at the helm of the Asian game. It wasn’t enough. Next, he extended his gaze far past the Doha city gates, and beyond all of Asia, to the distant European kingdom of FIFA. There was no higher place in football. FIFA dictated the rules of the game and was the keeper of soccer’s most sought-after prize, the 18-carat gold World Cup trophy. All the star players that Bin Hammam had so admired in his youth had adorned this glittering tournament. It was the greatest show on earth.
The Fédération Internationale de Football Association controls the beautiful game from its hilltop headquarters in the Swiss city of Zurich. The World Cup is the biggest and best-loved sporting tournament on the planet, and FIFA sweeps the hundreds of millions of dollars that flow in from marketing, sponsorship deals and TV rights into its vast reserves. World football’s governing body is controlled by an elite cabal of two dozen men who fly into Zurich from the far-flung corners of the world to meet in secrecy and call the shots on the sport. While FIFA’s congress, with a representative from each national football federation, met once a year and voted in the president every four, the ruling executive committee (Exco) of 24 men took many of the most important decisions including which country should host the World Cup. Bin Hammam wanted to be part of their club. He ran for election onto the executive committee in 1996, the same year he ascended to the Emir’s advisory council and the AFC, and his winning streak continued. The Qatari football-lover took his place around FIFA’s boardroom table and joined in the running of the international game.
This was a very long way from Doha’s sandy desert pitches and the gleaming corridors of the Diwan Palace. FIFA was a brave new world where creed and colour were no bar to prestige and recognition. Here, as Bin Hammam would quickly discover, those things were up for sale to the highest bidder.
Six years on, the delegates at FIFA’s 53rd annual congress in Seoul, South Korea, were sipping their evening drinks between the tall white columns in the atrium of the Grand Hilton Hotel. It was a humid May evening in 2002, the night before world football’s presidential election, and the lobby was alive with chatter and political intrigue. Speculation was mounting. Could the FIFA president Sepp Blatter hold on for a second term the next day? He was facing formidable opposition from Issa Hayatou, the powerful Cameroonian chief of the Confederation of African Football (CAF). What was more, his authority had been sensationally rocked days before by a legal complaint filed by 11 members of his own executive committee accusing him of abuse of power and financial mismanagement. Surely the president was finished? It would take something pretty spectacular to turn things around now.
Blatter was a small, square-set Swiss bureaucrat in his mid-sixties with silvery tufts of hair at his temples and a sly twinkle in his eye. He had been elected in 1998 when his mentor, the suave Brazilian João Havelange, stepped down after 24 years in power, and by anyone’s reckoning that was a tough act to follow. Havelange had transformed FIFA from a small gentlemen’s club with just eight employees presiding modestly over the organisation of the World Cup into a global powerhouse with hundreds of staff and billions of dollars in the bank. All this was made possible by a golden alliance formed early in his presidency with Horst Dassler, the Adidas scion, who came to be known as the godfather of sports sponsorship.
Havelange had campaigned in the 1974 election on a platform of expansion, promising to double the size of the World Cup, and he needed money to make it happen. Adidas had plenty of cash to offer, and it wanted to supply FIFA with branded sports gear to market its products to football fans around the world. So the game’s first major sponsorship deal was born. Adidas and Coca-Cola were the first big corporations to pile in and pay millions of dollars to slap their branding all over every available surface at the World Cup, and they were closely followed by fast food chains, electronics giants, beer companies and luxury watchmakers galore.
Spotting the television transmitter masts shooting up in every direction in the 1970s, Havelange had been quick to realise the riches that would flow from selling the rights to beam the world’s best-loved sporting tournament into homes all around the planet. The FIFA president packaged up the broadcast rights to future World Cups into bundles and put them on sale. Soon enough FIFA was raking in billions from TV, too. Just as Havelange had promised, the World Cup ballooned in size from just 16 teams in the final to 32 under his watch. More teams meant more matches, and more matches meant more broadcast money. With so much cash flooding in, Havelange had built FIFA its smart new base in Zurich, and hired an army of full-time staff, spin doctors and money men to turn world football’s governing body into the slick machine it is today.
Blatter worked for Dassler at Adidas headquarters in the French commune of Landersheim before migrating over to FIFA in 1975 to become its technical director in the first wave of hiring after the sponsorship gold-rush began. A slick PR man, schooled by the godfather himself in the arts of sports branding, Blatter had buckets of ingratiating charm, a background in business administration and an instinctive love of money. He was the perfect protégé for Havelange. The new technical director was tasked with spending Coca-Cola’s millions on new schemes to create more coaches, referees and sports doctors, and quickly ascended to become FIFA’s secretary general in 1981. When his master stepped down at the grand old age of 82, he was the natural successor.
Football had turned into seriously big business by the time Blatter took over in 1998, with the non-US TV rights to the next three World Cups on sale for $2.2 billion. The new FIFA president had a lot to live up to. Sure, he’d earned his spurs holding the purse strings for 17 years as secretary general, but Havelange was a giant in the mercenary world of international football and his were big boots for his small Swiss successor to fill. When Blatter took the head of the FIFA boardroom table, he looked around the room and asked himself how to win the trust and respect of the men staring back at him. It didn’t take long to spot the dollar signs in their eyes that gave him his answer. Blatter was the first president to professionalise his hitherto voluntary executive committee, offering hefty salaries and gold-plated benefits to the men seated around him. Their pay and perks were to be a closely guarded secret, but leaked documents revealed that by 2014 they were pocketing salaries of $200,000 for a handful of days’ work a year and topping up their wallets with daily allowances of $700 in cash.
Blatter had paid handsomely for the loyalty of his board, and he had sprayed FIFA’s cash around the planet in the form of generous development grants to national associations in his first presidential term. But now, here he was on the eve of his re-election in 2002 facing an insurrection. His own secretary general, Michel Zen-Ruffinen, had lashed out at Blatter’s dictatorial style and produced an explosive report accusing him of misleading accounting practices and conflicts of interest, prompting the 11 members of his well-paid executive committee to file a criminal complaint against him with the Zurich courts. How dare they? And as if that wasn’t bad enough, his opponent Hayatou was capitalising on the trouble by running on a ticket of transparency, which had won him the backing of the European football confederation, UEFA, and a raft of powerful figures on the executive committee.
Hayatou had a face like a bloodhound on a tall, athletic frame. The former middle-distance runner and basketball player had loomed over football’s high politics for two decades, having become president of CAF in 1988 and joined the executive committee two years later. Hayatou was the son of a local Sultan in Cameroon and he ruled over African football with a regal air. He had pocketed the secret salary, bonuses and allowances offered by Blatter with the same alacrity as his colleagues, but now he was promising to publish FIFA’s accounts each year and reveal the pay of the president as part of his sudden enthusiasm for transparency. Hayatou was a heavyweight and he did not pull his punches. ‘The image of FIFA is becoming very negative, due to the lack of leadership and illegal practices committed by its president,’ he told reporters. Heresy! But his pious stance had won him pledges of support across Europe, and he ruled over Africa’s 54 national associations whose bosses held more than half of the votes needed to win in the presidential race. He was a mean opponent to have to beat, and Blatter was still reeling on the ropes from Zen-Ruffinen’s attack.
The delegates whispering intrigue to one another in the Grand Hilton on the eve of the vote in May 2002 could have been forgiven for writing the president off when they gathered in the lobby for their nightcaps. But something strange was happening in the hotel that night, and suddenly it seemed as though the game was changing.
From the lobby floor, the chiefs of African football could be seen traipsing one by one up the stairs towards a room on the upper level of the five-star hotel’s grand atrium. Each would return after a few minutes, then the next would take his turn. Their votes would be crucial to victory. Would it be Blatter or Hayatou? The football officials lounging in wicker armchairs amid the tropical plants on the atrium floor were intrigued. Where were the Africans going? One or two plucky juniors made it their business to find out, and word quickly began to spread that the officials were heading into the penthouse suite of a powerful figure in world football. They went in one by one and emerged a few minutes later with a discreet smile for the next man in line. Which power-broker was holding private audiences with these crucial voters behind that closed bedroom door?
It was none other than Mohamed bin Hammam.
The Qatari billionaire had been fleet of foot in forging alliances when he arrived in Zurich to take his place at the FIFA boardroom table back in 1996, and the organisation’s powerful secretary general Sepp Blatter was the main target of his attentions. It was clear for all to see that this stocky Swiss pen-pusher, the darling of president Havelange, was waiting in the wings to seize control as soon as his master stepped aside. Bin Hammam had profited once before by befriending a man on the cusp of power, and he used all the same obsequious charm on Blatter that had won him the trust of Sheikh Hamad back in those early boom years in Doha.
When Havelange finally stood aside in 1998, Blatter went head to head with the then UEFA president Lennart Johansson for the top job in world football, with Bin Hammam behind him all the way. The billionaire Qatari bankrolled Blatter’s election campaign, supplied private aircraft to fly the Swiss candidate around the world and lobbied vociferously for his victory. The Swiss man quickly discovered that a friendship with Bin Hammam came with royal privileges, and the golden gates of the Amiri Diwan Palace swung wide open. Blatter became well acquainted with Sheikh Hamad, who even gave him the rare honour of using his royal jet on at least one leg of his campaign tour.
Bin Hammam was with Blatter in Paris in the days ahead of the FIFA congress at which the presidents of all 2031 member associations would come together to vote in his first election in 1998. The pair were planning the last few visits on the campaign tour, when news of a disaster reached them. Bin Hammam received a phone call from his wife Fatima to say that his son had been horrifically injured in a car crash back in Doha. The young man was close to death and Bin Hammam should rush home to be with him, she said. Bin Hammam did not go.
His decision to stay and fight beside Blatter instead of hurrying to his son’s bedside was a source of great pride, and he would often recount the story of his sacrifice. ‘We were in Paris and we were planning a trip to South Africa in a commercial flight, not belonging to or financed by HRH The Emir of Qatar,’ he would reminisce in a speech to FIFA delegates after the election. ‘The night before we travelled, I received a frantic phone call from my wife with the shocking news that my son, aged twenty-two, had met with a very serious accident and was fighting for his life and his condition was more towards death and was lying in the intensive care unit in a coma. I should immediately return to Doha. I regretted and apologised to my wife, and told her my son doesn’t need me but needs the blessing of God and help of doctors, while it is Mr Blatter who is in need of my help now. So I sacrificed seeing my son maybe for the last time.’ Fortunately, Bin Hammam’s son survived. But his dreadful accident had given his father a valuable opportunity to prove his slavish devotion to his new master – Sepp Blatter.
When FIFA’s member associations came together in Paris to vote in 1998, Blatter had triumphed over Johansson with 111 votes to 80. It was a commanding victory, and the new president of FIFA was hugely indebted to Bin Hammam – and the Emir. The presidential crown came with astonishing privileges. FIFA was getting richer by the second, and the president commanded that vast treasure chest from his plush office on the uppermost floor of the organisation’s Zurich headquarters. He pocketed a hefty salary but he would hardly ever have to pick up a bill again, because when he travelled the world his first-class tickets, gourmet meals and five-star penthouses all came free as perks of the job. FIFA was now an organisation with truly global power, controlling a game adored by billions of fans in every corner of the planet, so everywhere Blatter went he would be received like royalty by presidents, prime ministers, kings and queens. Yes, he had a lot to be thankful for.
True, though, that the involvement of his wealthy Qatari friend had not been without its complications. Tawdry rumours of cash-stuffed brown envelopes being shoved under the bedroom doors of the African voters at their hotel in Paris in 1998 had taken some of the sheen off his victory, but Bin Hammam had batted those off by insisting he had simply helped pay the expenses for some of the officials to travel to the vote. Blatter said sums of $50,000 had been given out as cash pre-payments of previously agreed grants to struggling African federations. Then Farah Addo, the vice-president of CAF, had caused a stink by claiming outrageously that Bin Hammam had offered him $100,000 and 18 other officials from the continent had also been offered cash to vote for Blatter. He sued Addo for libel and won: the official had to pay FIFA’s freshly re-anointed president 10,000 Swiss Francs and was banned from football for two years for the wicked slur on his name. Asked by FIFA’s disciplinary committee to provide any evidence that might justify his claims, Addo had handed over a photograph of Bin Hammam at the centre of a group of African officials who he said had signed a declaration alleging the Qatari had paid them to vote for Blatter. The committee was unimpressed, finding that Addo’s claims were baseless and he had ‘undermined the interests of football as a whole’.
On the eve of the 2002 election in Seoul, the delegates watching the African voters proceeding into Bin Hammam’s penthouse had good reason to ask questions about what was going on behind that closed bedroom door. Everyone in the atrium that night remembered the rumours from Paris. Nothing had come of all those accusations of bribery and brown envelopes, but then FIFA’s hilltop headquarters was a place where allegations of that sort came to die.
The morning of the vote, Bin Hammam stood at the entrance to the Grand Hilton congress hall in all his flowing white finery, greeting the delegates with the gracious condescension of a royal host receiving visitors. ‘We’re going to see fireworks today,’ he told one passing official. Sure enough, the continent of Africa swung its weight behind Blatter, and Hayatou’s candidacy was demolished 139 votes to 56. Days later, the treacherous secretary general Zen-Ruffinen who had tried to foment insurrection with his claims of financial malpractice announced he would be leaving FIFA on ‘mutually agreed terms’, and the 11 members of the executive committee who had brought the criminal complaint against their president thought better of their disloyalty and agreed to drop the action. All was well again, and Blatter gazed out over the Zurich skyline from his office once more and looked forward to another four years in charge.
Bin Hammam had snatched victory from the jaws of defeat for his master, and the ambitious Qatari had extracted a promise in return. The president had vowed privately that two terms of office would be enough for him. The next election wasn’t until 2006. By then he would be 70 and it would be time to reach for the proverbial pipe and slippers and retire to his home canton in the valley of Visp. Once he had stepped aside, he would do all he could to ensure that Bin Hammam would become his successor, just as Havelange had done for him, and the Qatari’s dreams of dominance in world football would at last be fully realised.
The same year Blatter was re-elected, Bin Hammam became the president of the Asian Football Confederation (AFC), overseeing its 45 member associations. This was real power, and Bin Hammam ran the AFC like his own personal fiefdom. It was good enough for now, but it would not keep him happy forever. He wanted the top job.
Blatter was so definite about his promise to stand aside and make way for his ambitious Qatari friend at the next election that he agreed to revise the FIFA statutes to limit presidents to just two terms of office. True to his word, when he returned to Zurich from Seoul in 2002 he called in his officials and told them to begin drafting the new set of rules right away. The new statutes would sharpen up the FIFA constitution in several respects: as well as confining the president to two stints in power, there were new regulations governing the status and transfer of players, and the rights of home nations to field national teams. The proposals were to be put to a vote at an extraordinary congress of FIFA on Bin Hammam’s doorstep in Doha in October 2003, and Blatter kept a beady eye on his staff’s progress in drafting the new statutes as the deadline approached.
Then, at the last minute, something changed. In a meeting with his aides to discuss the new rules, Blatter suddenly railed testily against the mention of the cap on presidential terms. That proposal was being dropped: ‘Bin Hammam can wait,’ he announced. The congress went ahead in Doha that October, but the new statutes put before FIFA’s member associations concerned only player transfers and the status of national teams. Term limits were nowhere on the agenda. Instead, Blatter asked the congress to extend his current term of office by another year, to 2007. They granted his wish.
It was a bitter blow for Bin Hammam. He told himself he was a fool to have trusted Blatter. That sly old Swiss fox had double-crossed him. After all he had done! But by now the FIFA president was building up a formidable power-base all of his own. He knew how to keep the troops happy, and he splashed FIFA’s cash liberally around the globe, bumping up pay and bonuses and writing cheques for hundreds of thousands of dollars to national member associations in the name of football development. He was building a solid coalition of support throughout Asia and Africa, with promises of more and more money as FIFA’s coffers bulged. It would be suicide to challenge Blatter head to head when the next election finally came round in 2007 – and anyway, that sort of confrontation was not in Bin Hammam’s nature. The softly spoken Qatari would have to put his dreams of becoming FIFA president on ice for at least another eight years, until the next term of office ended in 2011. By then, Blatter would be 75. Surely he would be ready to stand aside and let Bin Hammam take his turn?
Sure enough, when the 2007 election arrived, Blatter was returned unopposed. This time around, he didn’t need the same kind of leg-up from his wealthy Qatari allies. But the following year, when Blatter celebrated his tenth anniversary in power, he wrote to Bin Hammam remembering what his friend had done to secure those first victories in 1998 and 2002. ‘Everyone knows that in football, very few matches are won by one player alone. Therefore I would like to thank you for your support and above all your tireless work back then. Without you, dear Mohamed, none of this would ever have been possible,’ he wrote.
And then Blatter asked his friend to lift his chin and think ahead. ‘I have absolutely no doubt that we will look to the future with the same drive and commitment and that we will continue to work together in our duty to put football on the right path for the years to come.’
The servant was back, and the men in the majlis held out their delicate golden cups as he poured out some fresh coffee. Bin Hammam was still talking in his low growl. He recalled all he had done for Blatter, and how Blatter had failed to stand aside as he had promised. The old fox had smoothed the betrayal over with lashings of charm, of course. Bin Hammam was a proud man and the letter of thanks for his loyal service to the president, acknowledging in plain black ink that Blatter would be nothing without him, had also gone some way to consoling his bruised ego. But, he said, after the disappointment in 2007, nothing had prepared him for Blatter’s next big move.
The FIFA president had jetted into Doha early in 2008 to visit the Emir and Bin Hammam. On the morning of 11 February, he was taken to see Qatar’s Aspire Academy for talented young footballers and he made a characteristically gushing speech for the benefit of the television cameras. Blatter had been critical of Aspire in recent months, and the time had come to smooth things over. The academy had been founded by royal decree to talent-spot and train Qatar’s most promising up-and-coming footballers in 2004, but on the eve of the FIFA presidential election in April 2007 it had announced a bolder ambition.
The Aspire Africa Football Dreams project would send 6,000 talent-spotters to screen more than 500,000 boys in 700 impoverished locations across Algeria, Cameroon, Ghana, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal and South Africa. From each country, 50 would be selected to compete in a week of trials. Three victors from each country would then be flown to Doha for four weeks of training, and the most talented players would be enrolled in Aspire and airlifted out of poverty forever. The rest would be packed off back to Africa.
News of the massive talent hunt had discomfited Blatter. Qatar was attempting to buy up future football stars from across the continent to top up its languishing national team with some real world-class athletes. It was all part of the 30-year plan to turn Qatar into a truly modern country and a sporting powerhouse. But Africa was the foundation of Blatter’s influence, thanks to Bin Hammam’s generosity in 1998 and 2002, and now those Qataris were trying to park their scooters on his lawn. Handily, there was growing disquiet among human rights campaigners who likened the Aspire Africa programme to a human trafficking scheme, and Blatter was not slow to take advantage. In a written reply to five concerned members of the European Parliament, mysteriously leaked to the Observer newspaper, he wrote: ‘Their establishment of recruitment networks in these seven African countries reveals just what Aspire is all about. Aspire offers a good example of . . . exploitation.’
Blatter’s criticisms had stung badly. But now here he was at the Academy on 11 February, slathering the Emir and the Aspire officials with all the emollient charm he could muster. ‘This was a wonderful opportunity to see Aspire and to discuss the important role of sport in youth development and education,’ he simpered at the TV cameras. ‘The essence of football is education, because it teaches teamwork, discipline and respect for your peers and your competitors. The fact that Aspire has been able to combine both education and sport in one institution is remarkable.’
But, hang on: the assembled reporters were confused. Had Blatter not accused Aspire of exploiting poor African youngsters only months before? Quite the contrary: ‘This visit has provided me with the opportunity to learn about the Aspire Africa programme first-hand and I have to say that I am very relaxed and supportive about the project now that I understand how it works. Aspire has a balanced plan for youth development, which supports education and sport for Qatar-based and scholarship students from the developing world. This is making a very important contribution.’
So now all was happy and bright again, and Bin Hammam, Blatter and the Emir could celebrate their renewed friendship over a delicious banquet that evening. It was at the meal that Blatter suddenly played his surprise hand. The election was out of the way; the differences over Aspire settled. Blatter was grateful to Bin Hammam for standing aside in 2007, and he remembered all that his wealthy Qatari friends had done to help him win power in 1998 and stamp out the scourge of Hayatou in 2002. It was time, at last, to give something back. Bin Hammam recalled what Blatter had said to him in front of the Emir at that private dinner as clearly as if it were yesterday, he told his friends in the majlis. He remembered it because it shocked him. It was impossible. It was insane. The president of FIFA had waited for a pause in the conversation, sipped his drink and leaned back in his chair with a twinkling smile.
‘We are going to bring the World Cup to Qatar,’ he said.