“I have never met a more honest man than Markus Kattner,” said Blatter, who is himself under investigation by Swiss prosecutors and is serving a six-year ban imposed by FIFA over ethics violations.
Kattner’s firing “was for me an huge surprise…I don’t know the reasons for his dismissal, but if there was any guy at FIFA who did his job in an exceptional manner, it was definitely Mr. Kattner,” Blatter added, describing himself as “astonished” by the decision.
Kattner, a 45-year-old German-Swiss national, had been acting general secretary after previous general secretary Jerome Valcke was also dismissed for irregularities.
World football’s governing body — now led by Gianni Infantino who has vowed to cut out the rot that spread during the Blatter era — said an internal investigation uncovered evidence that Kattner had breached his fiduciary responsibilities in connection with his contract.
That investigation covered the period from 2008 to 2014, when Blatter was president.
Blatter told AFP that both he and Valcke “had the authority to decide on bonuses and it was all done in conformity with the rules”, an apparent admission that he was aware of the details of Kattner’s contract and bonuses.
A source familiar with FIFA’s internal investigation of Kattner who was not authorised to speak publicly told AFP that Blatter and Valcke were both fully aware of Kattner’s actions.
Valcke is also under criminal investigation in Switzerland.
Kattner’s sacking was a further reminder that turning the page on the Blatter era could prove a long and arduous process.
Infantino only this month named Senegalese Fatma Samoura as its new general secretary. Samoura is the body’s first woman secretary general and FIFA also wanted her United Nations background to give a sign of football’s new direction.