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		People like Blatter deserve Nobel prize, 
		Putin tells Swiss TV 
		
		 
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		[July 28, 2015] 
		By Tom Miles 
		  
		 GENEVA (Reuters) - FIFA boss Sepp Blatter 
		deserves a Nobel Prize for his stewardship of soccer's governing body, 
		Russian President Vladimir Putin said in an interview aired by Swiss 
		broadcaster RTS on Monday. 
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			 On Saturday, at a meeting with Putin in St Petersburg, Blatter said 
			that FIFA, facing a major bribery scandal, had passed a resolution 
			offering full support for holding the 2018 World Cup in Russia. 
			 
			"We all know the situation developing around Mr Blatter right now. I 
			don't want to go into details but I don't believe a word about him 
			being inolved in corruption personally," he said. 
			 
			"I think people like Mr Blatter or the heads of big international 
			sporting federations, or the Olympic Games, deserve special 
			recognition. If there is anyone who deserves the Nobel Prize, it's 
			those people.” 
			  
			
			  
			 
			Blatter announced he was quitting in June over a bribery scandal 
			being investigated by U.S., Swiss and other law enforcement agencies 
			that plunged FIFA into the worst crisis in its 111-year history. 
			Officials have been indicted though Blatter himself has not and he 
			denies any misconduct. 
			 
			The scandal has cast a cloud over the forthcoming World Cups in 
			Russia and Qatar, but Russian officials have dismissed any 
			suggestion Russia could be stripped of the contest. 
			 
			In May, when the scandal broke, Putin harshly criticised the U.S. 
			investigation into FIFA as meddling in matters that were outside its 
			jurisdiction. 
			
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			He rekindled that criticism in the interview broadcast on Monday, 
			and widened it to include Britain, noting that those two countries 
			had bid to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. 
			 
			"The way there is this fight against corrpution makes me wonder if 
			it isn't a continuation of the bids for 2018 and 2022." 
			 
			An economic crisis has forced cut-backs in Russia's World Cup 
			preparations, but Putin and FIFA officials have said this will not 
			affect Russia's ability to host the championship. 
			 
			(Reporting by Tom Miles, additional reporting by Michael Shields in 
			Zurich,; editing by Ralph Boulton) 
			
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