The Province

Al-Khelaifi facing bribery charges

Case against club’s Qatari president involves awarding of World Cup broadcast rights

- GRAHAM DUNBAR THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

GENEVA — The Qatari president of one of Europe’s most glamorous soccer clubs, Paris Saint-Germain, is under investigat­ion by Swiss prosecutor­s for suspected bribery of a top FIFA executive to get World Cup broadcasti­ng rights.

Criminal proceeding­s against Nasser Al-Khelaifi, PSG president and CEO of Qatar-owned BeIN Media Group, former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke and an unnamed “businessma­n in the sports rights sector” were announced by the office of Switzerlan­d’s attorney general on Thursday.

The case involves the award of broadcast rights for the next four World Cups from 2018 through 2030.

The proceeding against Al-Khelaifi is one of the first direct links to Qatar in sweeping investigat­ions by federal law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in Switzerlan­d, the United States and France of FIFA, internatio­nal soccer and the 2018-2022 World Cup bidding contests.

The Paris offices of BeIN Sports were searched by two magistrate­s from the French financial prosecutor’s office, the federal agency said. They were assisted by investigat­ors from an anti-corruption unit.

Properties were also searched in Greece, Italy and Spain, while Valcke was questioned in Switzerlan­d, the Swiss federal prosecutio­n office said. It cited co-operation from a European Union criminal investigat­ion agency.

“Multiple premises were searched, assets were seized and interviews were conducted as a result of this joint operation,” the EU body known as Eurojust said in a statement.

No suspect was detained on Thursday, said Swiss prosecutor­s whose work investigat­ing FIFA and suspected money laundering linked to World Cup hosting bids began in November 2014.

Then, FIFA gave the Swiss federal office a report and evidence from its then-ethics prosecutor — former U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia — into the dual World Cup bidding contest won by Russia and Qatar.

Al-Khelaifi is alleged to have offered “undue advantages” to Valcke — FIFA’s CEO-like secretary general from 2007 until his firing in January 2016 — for the award of media rights in “certain countries” for the 2026 and 2030 World Cup.

Al-Khelaifi and Valcke previously negotiated a deal for the 2018 and 2022 rights weeks after Qatar won the 2022 hosting vote. In January 2011, FIFA announced that Al Jazeera Sports — which later became BeIN — secured the rights for 23 territorie­s across the Middle East and North Africa, including Saudi Arabia.

FIFA has never announced if BeIN also secured any 2026 and 2030 World Cup rights.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Paris Saint-Germain’s Qatari president Nasser Al-Khelaifi, applauding one of his soccer club’s victories in 2015, is in a less celebrator­y mood now that he is under investigat­ion for suspected bribery of a top FIFA executive to get World Cup...
— GETTY IMAGES FILES Paris Saint-Germain’s Qatari president Nasser Al-Khelaifi, applauding one of his soccer club’s victories in 2015, is in a less celebrator­y mood now that he is under investigat­ion for suspected bribery of a top FIFA executive to get World Cup...

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