More claims of graft in world football marred the final stages of the race to host the 2018 and 2022 World Cups yesterday, as Olympic chiefs vowed to probe one of their own officials caught up in the allegations.

The renewed allegations and action by the International Olympic Committee failed to dampen an intense lobbying drive by British prime minister David Cameron in Zurich to woo support for England’s 2018 bid ahead of tomorrow’s vote.

But a spokesman for Vladimir Putin said that the Russian premier would not follow in his rival’s steps, as officials from Russia 2018 suggested that the members of the FIFA executive committee had already made up their mind.

The final decision will be made in a secret ballot among the 22 top footballing officials tomorrow, the first time the hosts of two tournaments had been chosen at the same time.

England, Russia and joint bids from Spain and Portugal and Holland and Belgium are competing for the 2018 World Cup, while Australia, the US, Qatar, Japan and South Korea are bidding for the 2022 tournament.

The allegations surrounding suspect payments more than decade ago for FIFA’s veterans have cast a shadow over the competition for votes, forcing executive committee member and African football chief Issa Hayatou to reject the claims.

Hayatou is also a member of the IOC, which has vowed “zero tolerance” for corruption.

A report by the BBC late on Monday alleged newly-surfaced evidence showed three committee members – Hayatou, Ricardo Teixeira of Brazil and South America’s Nicolas Leoz – received secret payments from a marketing firm that collapsed in 2001.

Hayatou yesterday said that the firm, International Sports and Leisure (ISMM/ISL), had made a 25,000 Swiss franc “solidarity” payment “in the context of the organisation of the African Football Confederation’s 40th anniversary.”

Hayatou said he had “no fears” that the affair would spill over and affect the attribution of the 2018 and 2022 World Cups, adding that his conscience was clear.

Nonetheless, fellow Olympic chiefs yesterday moved to examine any evidence.

“The IOC has taken note of the allegations made by BBC Panorama and will ask the programme makers to pass on any evidence they may have to the appropriate authorities,” the Swiss-based body said in a statement.

“The IOC has a zero tolerance against corruption and will refer the matter to the IOC Ethics Commission,” it added, without specifically naming Hayatou.

FIFA insisted yesterday that the ISMM/ISL “investigation and case are definitely closed,” without convictions of its officials.

Although FIFA had dropped a criminal complaint over alleged kickbacks for TV contracts, in 2008 a Swiss court handed down fines for embezzlement or false accounting on three of the ISMM/ISL executives while prosecutors revealed a murky trail of suspect payments.

Only weeks ago, FIFA suspended two other executive committee members following a British newspaper report on vote buying opportunities in the bidding process.

Leaders of England 2018 bid fear the new BBC documentary would undermine their chances.

In a high powered attempt to limit the damage, Cameron was lobbying Warner, head of the North, Central American and Caribbean Association Football (CONCACAF) region, regarded as lynchpin in the vote.

England officials will also have support from heir to the throne Prince William and English football icon David Beckham.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.