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Germany challenges tickets sales for World Cup
(Reuters)
Updated: 2005-12-02 10:48

Germany's consumer association launched a legal challenge on Thursday against the conditions under which some tickets for next year's World Cup finals are being sold.

The complaint concerns fans who applied in November to be placed on a waiting list for anticipated returns.


People with their faces painted in the colours of countries qualified for the 2006 World Cup sit in attendance as Austrian artist Andre Heller presents in Berlin Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2005, his team for the performance gala at the start of the 2006 World Cup in Germany. Tickets ranging between 100 euro (US$ 118) and 750 euro ($US 883) went on sale Wednesday for the two-hour show on June 7 at Berlin's Olympiastadion that will kick off soccer's month-long showcase.[AP]

The association complains that applicants have to pay in advance without knowing whether they will get a ticket and are automatically charged a five euro ($5.89) service fee whether successful or not.

It also says that unsuccessful applicants will get their money back only after the World Cup.

The consumer body has asked a court in Frankfurt to make the German Football Association (DFB) adjust the conditions.

It said that the DFB had not revised its conditions by a certain deadline and that a DFB offer of talks was unacceptable.

"We want to ensure that fans mainly experience excitement over the World Cup rather than frustration about ticket allocations," Patrick von Braunmuehl, the consumer association's deputy head, said in a statement.

World Cup organising committee vice president Horst Schmidt said he regretted the challenge, but said he was untroubled by it. He argued the organisers were simply giving fans a further chance to buy tickets.

He added organisers responded to reasonable criticism, but this was neither sound nor constructive.

"It cannot be ruled out that some will try to use the prominent platform that the 2006 World Cup offers for their own purposes," Schmidt said.
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