FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke conceded on Friday that Brazil
will not complete its preparations in time for the Confederations Cup
and warned that compromises “will be impossible” ahead of next year’s
World Cup.
Valcke’s comments came on the day Brazilian organisers delivered the
third of the six stadiums that will be used in the warm-up tournament,
which begins on June 15.
“The next few weeks will be an acid test for the host cities, the
local organising committee, the federal government and Fifa on the final
lap of preparations for the Fifa Confederations Cup,” Valcke said in
his latest column published on Fifa’s website. “We are all working
together tirelessly against the clock to make sure that the facilities
will be ready to host a world-class tournament in two months.”
After a series of delays, the Arena Fonte Nova was finally opened
Friday in the northeastern city of Salvador, and Valcke said local
organisers have promised to deliver the remaining three venues by the
end of the month.
Fifa initially wanted all six stadiums to be ready last December, but
was forced to extend the deadline because of constant delays in
construction. Infrastructure work in the host cities will not be
entirely done either, and Brazilian officials recently acknowledged that
some of the promises made on telecommunications may not be completely
fulfilled.
“We will make it,” Valcke said. “It will be a fantastic tournament,
but not all operational arrangements will be 100 percent. It is
impossible to expect this to happen in the shortened preparation time –
in most cases, less than two months instead of the scheduled six – due
to the compromises we made with the cities.”
Local organisers had promised that all venues would be ready by April
15, but that deadline won’t be fulfilled. The president of the local
organising committee, Jose Maria Marin, said last year that the stadiums
not ready by that date would be excluded from the competition. But the
venues in Brasilia, which will host the tournament’s opener, and in Rio
de Janeiro, home to the final at the Maracana, won’t be ready by then.
Fifa said it will not tolerate these kinds of exceptions next year.
“I want to reiterate – this will be impossible to repeat for the Fifa
World Cup,” Valcke said. “(This) has been acknowledged by the federal
government and LOC. The deadline for the Fifa World Cup stadiums
delivery stands firm as December 2013. There will be no compromise.”
He noted that getting the country ready for the World Cup “is an infinitely more complex and demanding job.”
“In 2014 we expect more than half a million international visitors
alone, and in total, more than three million spectators flocking to the
12 stadiums,” Valcke said. “The scale and magnitude of the Fifa World
Cup requires a minimum six month operational set-up.
“While we are totally focused on the delivery of the Fifa
Confederations Cup, we need to keep working full speed on the 2014
infrastructure in parallel.”
Valcke said he will travel to Brazil in May to inspect construction
at stadium in the northeastern city of Natal, and that Fifa President
Sepp Blatter will visit all 12 World Cup host cities in June, during the
Confederations Cup.
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