Mutko
stepping down as Russia Football Union chief
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[December 26, 2017]
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russia Deputy
Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko, banned for life from the Olympics this
month, is temporarily stepping down from his role as head of the
country's Football Union, he said on Monday.
Mutko is to appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) on
Tuesday against the decision by the International Olympic Committee
(IOC) to ban him from the Games over allegations of state-sponsored
doping.
"For the period of the proceedings I will suspend my work at the
Russian Football Union for six months," Mutko was quoted as saying
by Russian news agencies.
The IOC said this month it was banning Russia from the 2018
Pyeongchang Winter Olympics after finding evidence of "unprecedented
systematic manipulation" of doping procedures.
Russia is hosting next year's soccer World Cup in 11 cities
including Moscow, St Petersburg and Sochi.
Mutko also said he was considering resigning as head of the World
Cup's organizing committee (LOC).
"FIFA understands Mr Mutko's decision which was also taken in the
best interest of the World Cup next summer," the global soccer body
said in a statement. "FIFA thanks Mr. Mutko for this responsible
step and for the work carried out so far for the World Cup."
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Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko speaks during a news
conference after the Russian Football Union's executive committee
meeting in Moscow, Russia December 25, 2017. REUTERS/Sergei
Karpukhin
FIFA added that Mutko's decision "will have no impact on the
successful staging of the World Cup next summer, as FIFA, the
Russian Government, RFU and the LOC continue their fruitful
cooperation on the preparations for the World Cup according to
plan."
Mutko sat on FIFA's decision-making Council, previously known as the
executive committee, from 2009 until earlier this year when he was
barred from standing for re-election.
Mutko's position as a government minister was ruled by FIFA's review
committee to be incompatible with FIFA statutes demanding political
neutrality from its members.
(Reporting by Gabrielle Tétrault-Farber, additional reporting by
Brian Homewood in London, writing by Denis Pinchuk, editing by Ed
Osmond/Greg Stutchbury)
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