Coca-Cola and McDonald's both made it clear that they are deeply unhappy with the way FIFA is governed and want major change.
Their intervention comes only days ahead of a crucial FIFA executive committee meeting on Monday at which both possible reforms and a timetable to elect a new president to replace Sepp Blatter, who has run FIFA for 17 years, will be discussed.
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Coca-Cola urged Zurich-based FIFA to support the creation of an independent body to reform the way it is run. "We have written to FIFA and asked them to support an independent third-party commission for reforms," a spokeswoman for Coca-Cola said on Friday.
And McDonald's said it has told FIFA that there needs to be "meaningful changes to restore trust and credibility with fans and sponsors alike," stressing that FIFA's internal controls and compliance culture "are inconsistent with expectations McDonald's has for its business partners throughout the world." The US national labour union federation, AFL-CIO, wrote to the CEOs of Coca-Cola, McDonald's and fellow FIFA sponsor, Visa, this week to ask them to support the calls for an independent commission.
McDonald's, while not specifying particular support for an independent commission, said in a statement that "recent allegations and indictments have severely tarnished FIFA in a way that strikes at the very heart of our sponsorship." The fast-food giant added: "The world expects concrete actions and so does McDonald's." Added a McDonald's spokesman: "There is a wide range of deep reform that has to happen within FIFA. An independent commission is among the examples of how to address the urgent need for reform." Visa did not immediately provide a comment.
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