Valcke tries to pacify enraged Brazil

APOLOGETIC: Jerome Valcke PHOTO: GALLO IMAGES
APOLOGETIC: Jerome Valcke PHOTO: GALLO IMAGES

BRASILIA - Fifa secretary-general Jerome Valcke has apologised to Brazil after he was denounced for saying that preparations for the 2014 World Cup were behind schedule, according to the country's government.

"I would like to present my apologies to everyone who was offended by my comments," Valcke said in a letter sent to Sports Minister Aldo Rebelo, his department said.

Valcke said last week that Brazil needed "a kick up the backside" to catch up on vital infrastructure work, with just over two years to go to the start of football's showpiece global event and the first World Cup in Brazil since 1950.

The senior Fifa official added that he "profoundly regretted that an incorrect interpretation" of his comments had triggered such an angry response from the host country.

He clarified that in French the phrase se donner un coup de pied aux fesses (to give someone a kick up the backside) only meant "to pick up the pace". The translation into Portuguese used a stronger expression, he said.

The Brazilian government on Saturday denounced Valcke as a "loudmouth" and said they no longer considered him a go-between between Fifa and the World Cup organisers.

On Monday, Rebelo made the government's position official, sending a letter to Fifa president Sepp Blatter, in which he said that they were "horrified" by the comments, Brazilian newspapers reported.

The row erupted a week before a new inspection by Valcke to evaluate how work was progressing in the four cities already designated for the Confederations Cup next year - Rio de Janeiro, Brasilia, Belo Horizonte and Fortaleza.

In his letter, Valcke also said there were concerns at Fifa about delays in organisation for the World Cup.

Fifa, including Blatter himself, has for several months been critical of delays in work on stadiums and infrastructure, plus the fact that deadlines kept being adjusted.

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