South Africa football chief admits $10 m payment, says not a bribe
South Africa football chief admits $10 m payment, says not a bribe
"How could we have paid a bribe for votes four years after we had won the bid?" said South African Football Association president Danny Jordaan.

Johannesburg: A South African football official on Sunday admitted the country had paid out 10 million in 2008 but denied it was a bribe to FIFA to host the 2010 World Cup.

"How could we have paid a bribe for votes four years after we had won the bid?" president of the South African Football Association (SAFA) Danny Jordaan told South Africa's Sunday Independent newspaper.

"I haven't paid a bribe or taken a bribe from anybody in my life. We don't know who is mentioned there (in the indictment)," he added.

A US indictment said that in 2008, bundles of cash in a briefcase were earlier allegedly handed over at a Paris hotel as a bribe by a "high-ranking South African bid committee official".

The cash was allegedly later delivered to former FIFA vice president Jack Warner, who was then also president of the confederation of North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF).

Warner was among 14 people indicted by the United States on Wednesday, and is alleged to have sought and accepted bribes during the bidding process for the 1998 and 2010 World Cups in France and South Africa.

Jordaan, who was president of South Africa's 2010 Local Organising Committee, said the 10 million payment was made to CONCACAF.

The payment, he said, was South Africa's contribution towards CONCACAF's football development fund.

Earlier this week, South Africa's Minister of Sport Fikile Mbalula rejected the corruption allegations, criticising the US for acting without consulting with South Africa.

Thabo Mbeki, who was president when South Africa won the bid in 2004, becoming the first African country to host the World Cup, also denied that a bribe was paid by his government.

"I am not aware of anybody who solicited a bribe from the government for the purpose of our country being awarded the right to host the World Cup," he said in statement, adding "no public money was ever used to pay a bribe."

He said his government would "never have paid any bribe even if it were solicited."

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