Fifa Corruption Scandal is 'World Cup of Fraud'
Corruption at the heart of world football - why has the beautiful game become so ugly?
The football world must consider its position on transparency and its attitude to corruption after 14 high ranking Fifa officials were arrested on charges of soliciting and accepting bribes going back 24 years. Jeffrey Webb, widely seen as a successor to Fifa president Sepp Blatter, was the most senior to be charged by the US authorities conducting the investigation, and hails from the Cayman Islands. We speak to Paul Kennedy a journalist based on the islands who knew him, and to Transparency International, a pressure group taking a strong interest in Fifa.
Fewer people in the world now go hungry compared to 25 years ago, according to the United Nation's latest Hunger Report, but 800 million people worldwide still do not have access to adequate food supplies. Could the mobile phone help those most in need?
And as Memphis sings a final farewell to blues legend BB King, we ask where are the music giants of today? We are joined by two guests on opposite sides of the pacific, Peter Morici, Economist at the University of Maryland - who is in Washington, and David Moser, director of Chinese Studies at Beijing Capital Normal University in Beijing.
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- Thu 28 May 2015 00:05GMTΒι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ World Service Online
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