INVESTIGATORS probing claims of bribery by senior FIFA members will carry out interviews of the remaining witnesses in the Bahamas.
Around 18 of the 25 members of the Caribbean Football Union (CFU) had rejected a summons to meet investigators in Miami but have now agreed to the new venue.
FIFA's ethics committee have appointed an agency owned by former FBI director Louis Freeh to investigate claims that FIFA members Jack Warner and Mohamed Bin Hammam paid or offered bribes of 40,000 US dollars to each of the CFU's associations.
Warner and Bin Hammam have been suspended pending the outcome of the probe. They deny any wrongdoing.
Captain Horace Burrell, the Jamaican who is acting president of the CFU in Warner's absence, confirmed all members would speak to the investigators.
He said: "In light of the attempts to address the challenges facing the Caribbean Football Union; as well as to bring closure to the ethics committee proceedings, members of the CFU will fully co-operate with any investigation being conducted on behalf of the FIFA ethics committee.
"We have received notice that the requested interviews will now be conducted in the Bahamas as opposed to the United States of America.
"This event has dragged on for too long, many have suffered and many will continue to suffer. And so the union is unified in its position that in the interest of this game, we have agreed to attend the interviews at dates convenient to our respective members."
Meanwhile, the power struggle within the CONCACAF organisation that covers countries in the CFU, plus central and north America is continuing.
Lisle Austin, a Warner ally who has been banned by FIFA from any football activity, said he had won a court injunction in the Bahamas that would result in his return to office as acting president of the confederation.
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