BBC News with Jonathan Wheatley
The governing body of world football, Fifa, has
suspend
ed two executive committee members over allegations of bribery. Fifa's ethics committee meeting in Zurich said the head of Asian">Asian football, Mohamed Bin Hammam, and Fifa vice president Jack Warner had a case to answer. Sepp Blatter was
cleared of
any wrongdoing. Our sports correspondent Alex">Alex Capstick reports from Zurich.
A
dramatic
day which ended with Sepp Blatter almost certain to be re-elected as president of football's world governing body - he's survived a hearing of the ethics commission, but two of the organisation's most senior members have been
provisionally
suspended. Jack Warner has served on Fifa's executive committee for 28 years. Mohamed Bin Hammam, who had earlier
pulled out of
the presidential race, is the head of the Asian confederation. It's alleged they tried to buy votes. Both men deny the charges, but this corruption crisis has been the most damaging in Fifa's history.
Serb nationalists have demonstrated in Belgrade in protest at the arrest of the former Bosnian Serb military commander Ratko Mladic. General Mladic is expected to be transferred to the international tribunal in The Hague this week to be tried for genocide over the massacre of nearly 8,000 Muslim men and boys at Srebrenica in Bosnia in 1995. Mark Lowen is in Belgrade.
The protest officially organised by the far-right Serbian Radical Party has officially finished, but the protesters have actually moved away to another part of the city, and they are