Interpol put two top former FIFA officials on its "red notice" wanted list at the request of U.S. authorities on Wednesday as their investigation into corruption at soccer's governing body gathered pace.
The move by the international police body came the day after FIFA President
Sepp Blatter stunned world soccer by resigning shortly before it emerged that he was also under investigation by U.S. law enforcement.
A source close to FIFA said Blatter's advisers had told him he must reverse course and quit. Critics pointed to the widening criminal probe, disquiet among sponsors, and pressure from Europe's powerful soccer body UEFA as possible reasons.
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UEFA had opposed Blatter, and Michel Platini, the UEFA president who is favorite to succeed the 79-year-old Swiss national, had urged him not to stand for re-election as FIFA faced the worst crisis in its 111-year history.
"Due to yesterday's announcement and the uncertain and unpredictable nature of the investigations, I have decided that it would be more appropriate to postpone the meeting that was announced last week, and which could have taken place in Berlin this weekend," Platini, a former French soccer star, said.
"Considering new information is revealed every day, I believe it is wiser to take time to assess the situation, so together we can take a position on this issue."
As the FIFA crisis unfolds, Interpol issued international wanted person alerts for Jack Warner, former president of CONCACAF, which governs football in North and Central America and the Caribbean, and Nicolas Leoz, the former head of South America's soccer federation.
The others subject to the so-called "red notices" -- not arrest warrants -- are Alejandro Burzaco, Hugo Jinkis and Mariano Jinkis, who are among soccer officials and sports media and promotion executives facing U.S. corruption charges involving more than $150 million in bribes, and Jose Margulies, a Brazilian who headed two offshore companies that were involved in broadcasting soccer matches.
FIFA has denied that another senior official, Secretary-General Jerome Valcke, was involved in a $10 million payment approved by the South African Football Association that lies at the heart of the U.S. investigation.
At a news conference in Johannesburg, sports minister Fikile Mbalula denied that the payment to Warner during South Africa's successful bid for the 2010 World Cup was a bribe.
Mbalula said South Africa had not bought votes for the right to host the finals.
U.S. legal authorities last week announced they are investigating alleged bribery and corruption at FIFA going back 24 years and Swiss prosecutors announced their own criminal investigation into the award of the 2018 World Cup to Russia and the 2022 tournament to Qatar.
The Kremlin said Russia was surprised by Blatter's resignation but was pressing on with preparations for the World Cup finals in 2018.
Blatter, who has led FIFA for 17 years, is being investigated by U.S. prosecutors and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, a person who spoke on condition of anonymity told Reuters late on Tuesday.
U.S. Attorney General Loretta Lynch, on a visit to Latvia, declined to comment on whether Blatter is under investigation.

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