Joao Havelange resignation
from the IOC five years ago avoided an investigation into the ISL allegations,
which Havelange had denied.
Former Fifa president Joao
Havelange has died at the age of 100.
The Brazilian was
predecessor to Sepp Blatter at world football's governing body, serving from
1974 to 1998.
He resigned as Fifa's
honorary president in April 2013 following an investigation into bribery
allegations and was admitted to hospital the following year with a lung
infection.
He was an International
Olympic Committee (IOC) member from 1963 until 2011, resigning because of ill
health.
"He had one idea in
his head, to make football a global game with his slogan 'football is the
universal language', and he succeeded," said former Fifa president Sepp
Blatter.
Havelange represented
Brazil in swimming at the 1936 Olympics - the year he qualified as a lawyer -
before his election to the IOC.
As Fifa president he led
the World Cup's expansion from 16 to 32 teams, with six competitions held under
his tenure.
However, his career was
also mired in controversy over bribery allegations.
In 2010, a BBC Panorama
programme accused Havelange and son-in-law Ricardo Teixeira of taking millions
of dollars in bribes from Swiss marketing agency International Sport and
Leisure (ISL) to retain the company as Fifa's sole official marketer.

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