Fifa president Sepp Blatter has been provisionally suspended for 90 days. Members of Fifa’s ethics committee met this week after the Swiss attorney general opened criminal proceedings against Blatter, 79, last month.

He is accused of signing a contract “unfavourable” to football’s governing body and making a “disloyal payment” to Uefa president Michel Platini, 60.

Swiss Blatter, who has run Fifa since 1998, and Platini, who wants to succeed him, deny any wrongdoing.

A final decision is likely to be made today by Hans Joachim Eckhert, the head of Fifa’s ethics adjudicatory chamber.

Blatter’s adviser Klauss Stohlker told BBC Sport: “The news was communicated to the president this afternoon. He is calm. Remember he is the father of the ethics committee. This is provisional for 90 days but he isn’t actually suspended. The committee hasn’t yet made a decision and their meetings continue.”

Yesterday, Blatter told a German magazine that he was being “condemned without there being any evidence for wrongdoing”.

“This is certainly not the way Sepp Blatter wanted to leave Fifa. He wanted to go out having restored some credibility and integrity to his own role, and to Fifa itself.”

The ethics committee had been meeting in Zurich since Monday and have yet to make a decision on Platini.

The investigation is centred on allegations believed to be around a 2005 TV rights deal between Fifa and Jack Warner, the former president of Concacaf, the governing body of football in North and Central America and the Caribbean.

It is also examining a payment of two million Swiss francs (£1.35m) that Platini received in 2011 for working for Blatter. He claims it was “valid compensation” for work carried out more than nine years previously.

The Frenchman has provided information to the criminal investigation but said he has done so as a witness.

Swiss prosecutors said he is being treated as “in- between a witness and an accused person” as they investigate corruption at world football’s governing body.

The latest development came hours after former Fifa vice-president Chung Mong-joon, who is also under investigation by Fifa’s ethics committee, told BBC Sport that his campaign to succeed Blatter was being “smeared”.

Blatter won a fifth consecutive Fifa presidential election on May 29 but, following claims of corruption, announced his decision to step down on June 2. He is due to finish his term at a Fifa extraordinary congress on February 26. — BBC Sport

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