JOHANNESBURG (Sapa-AFP) - No terror threats against the World Cup have been uncovered by any intelligence agency working with FIFA, despite claims of an Al-Qaeda plot in Iraq, the football governing body said Thursday.
"For the time being, we haven't received (information about) any threat against the World Cup from any of the intelligence agencies we are working with," FIFA's secretary general Jerome Valcke Valcke said.
"We are working very well with Interpol and with the police departments of each of the 32 participating countries" to ensure the security of the event, he told the Foreign Correspondents Association in Johannesburg.
"I hope the world will be calm" during the World Cup, which kicks off on June 11, he added.
An Iraqi security spokesman said on Monday that a 30-year-old Saudi man arrested two weeks ago had "participated in the planning of a terrorist act in South Africa during the World Cup."
Reports indicated the man had taken part in planning attacks against the Danish and Dutch teams in response to perceived insults against the prophet Mohammed in Denmark and the Netherlands.