When will Fifa finally hit the iceberg?
Fifa has almost certainly broken it’s own statutes. Imposing emergency measures now might just be the massive lifeboat world football so badly needs.
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Fifa has almost certainly broken it’s own statutes. Imposing emergency measures now might just be the massive lifeboat world football so badly needs.
Swiss prosecutors open criminal proceedings against Fifa President Sepp Blatter over a TV rights deal.
David Cameron insists he has honoured his “vow” to Scottish voters, but the SNP says the promise that may have kept Scotland in the UK has been broken.
The most interesting thing to emerge from today’s FIFA briefing by a country mile – there is more to come.
Emotional arguments made on both sides as MPs vote on the “right to die” for the first time in twenty years.
Is this really the biggest refugee crisis since 1945? What are the facts behind the headlines?
Migrants stage protests in Budapest as authorities refuse to let them board trains towards Germany.
Hundreds of migrants chant “Germany! Germany!” as they gather outside a train station in Budapest waiting to board trains to Austria and Germany.
Football clubs across the UK are banning reporters from their stadiums because they don’t like what’s being reported. Nowhere else in British public life is this tolerated.
Those mighty struggles that the EU is wrestling with today – Greece and migration – go to the heart of the “out” campaigners best hopes of winning.
The England women’s football team are through to the quarterfinals of the World Cup – a traditional stumbling block for the men. Who are their key players and what obstacles do they face?
Barack Obama says America is the only developed country where gun massacres are commonplace. Is he right?
If corruption is indeed proven, the vote could be nullified. So where would that leave Russia and Qatar?
The Swiss attorney general, Michael Lauber, is looking into banking links relating to Fifa as part of a corruption investigation into the football world governing body.
Before he finally leaves the Fifa presidency, is it possible Sepp Blatter could preside over a radical change in the way football’s governing body is run?