Michel Platini will quit as the head of European football after a sports tribunal on Monday rejected his final appeal against his ban from football over a suspect $2.0 million payment he received from FIFA.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), where Platini appealed against his sanction, reduced his suspension from six years to four, saying the penalty initially imposed by FIFA's ethics committee was "too severe".
But the court said it was "not convinced" that the $2.0 million (1.8 million euros) payment Platini received from FIFA in 2011 was legitimate.
FIFA's tough punishment of the French football legend was "justified in view of the superior functions carried out by Mr. Platini... the absence of any repentance and the impact that this matter has had on FIFA's reputation".
The payment was ordered by world football's disgraced ex-president Sepp Blatter, who was also brought down over the infamous transaction.
The pair are the highest-profile casualties in an unprecedented set of corruption scandals within world football, which has seen dozens of long-serving FIFA executives arrested and charged with corruption.
- UEFA succession -
Platini, once the front-runner to succeed Blatter as the most powerful man in the sport, said in a statement that following the ruling he had no choice but to resign from UEFA.
"As agreed with the national associations, I resign as president of UEFA to pursue my fight before the Swiss courts to prove my probity in this case," he said.
He called the CAS ruling "a profound injustice".
UEFA's executive committee is to meet in Basel on May 18, before the Europa League final, when it will set a date for an election to replace Platini.
In a statement noting the CAS ruling, UEFA said it will not appoint an interim president.
The head of the Dutch football association Michael van Praag, a possible contender to replace Platini, declined to comment on the ruling but called on Europe "to show unity", the ANP news agency said.
The ruling means Platini will be barred from presiding over the Euro 2016 that opens in his native France on June 10, a tournament which he helped organise until he was provisionally suspended by FIFA in December.
- Unethical, disloyal -
Platini and Blatter have both denied any wrongdoing. They have insisted the $2.0 million was part of a legitimate oral contract for consulting work performed by Platini.
The CAS ruling noted that Platini had a valid consulting contract with FIFA signed in 1999 -- with an agreed salary of 300,000 Swiss francs ($300,000) per year -- which terminated in 2002.
But, the $2.0 million he received from FIFA in 2011, "was not based on any document established at the time of the contractual relations" and did not match the amount left unpaid at the end of the contract, CAS said.
The ruling from the three-judge panel highlighted that Blatter authorised the payment four months before a FIFA presidential election.
Blatter was running against Mohamed Bin Hammam of Qatar and there has been speculation that Blatter approved the payment to Platini to secure the Frenchman's backing in the election.
While the sports tribunal made no judgement on Blatter's motivation for approving the payment, it dismissed Platini's claim that the funds were justified back pay for work performed a decade earlier.
The court "was not convinced by the legitimacy of the payment, which was only recognised by Mr. Platini and Mr. Blatter", the ruling said.
It described Platini's conduct as "not ethical or loyal".
Blatter is under criminal investigation in Switzerland over the transaction and other aspects of his management of FIFA.
Platini has given evidence in the probe with the status of someone between a suspect and a witness.
Blatter was replaced as FIFA's president in February by Gianni Infantino, Platini's former number two at UEFA, who has vowed to turn the page on an era within world football plagued by scandal and graft.
Source: AFP
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