Gianni Infantino has been in charge of FIFA for just two weeks, but he’s already taking steps to right the alleged wrongs carried out under the leadership of Sepp Blatter.<br /><br /> World football’s governing body has filed for tens of millions of dollars in compensation from former executive committee members being prosecuted in the US for graft.<br /><br /> The organisation has, for the first time, acknowledged that its officials “sold” votes in World Cup bidding contests.<br /><br /> But is FIFA a victim attempting to move forward with the transparency long demanded of it? Or are people right to remain sceptical? <br /><br /> For more on this story Joe Allen from euronews’ sports desk spoke to Deborah Unger from the ‘Corruption in Sport’ initiative at Transparency International.<br /><br /> Joe Allen, euronews:<br />“This is, effectively, the first time FIFA has confirmed it believes its senior executive committee members were guilty of bribery on a grand scale. Is this a genuine step towards a new era of transparency at football’s wo