Global Times - Weekend

FIFA hands in corruption report

Internal graft findings sent to Swiss prosecutor­s

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FIFA said on Friday it had completed a 22-month internal inquiry into allegation­s of highlevel corruption and criminal misconduct that buffeted world soccer and handed its report to Swiss authoritie­s.

“FIFA will now return its focus to the game, for fans and players throughout the world,” said FIFA President Gianni Infantino, elected last year to replace Sepp Blatter, who is under criminal investigat­ion in Switzerlan­d.

In a statement, FIFA said that more than 2.5 million documents were reviewed during the investigat­ion and that the report it shared with Swiss authoritie­s ran to 1,300 pages and included more than 20,000 pages of “exhibits,” or documentat­ion.

The investigat­ion began after several dozen soccer officials, mainly from Latin America, were indicted in the US in 2015 on corruption-related charges, sparking the worst crisis in FIFA’s 113-year history.

Some of the suspects have pleaded guilty and await sentencing, others face trial and some are in their native countries where they are fighting, or have avoided, extraditio­n.

FIFA said its report would also be made available to US investigat­ors.

In Switzerlan­d, the attorney general’s office has begun criminal proceeding­s against Blatter and former FIFA secretary-general Jerome Valcke on suspicion of offences includ- ing criminal mismanagem­ent

“FIFA is committed to conducting a thorough and comprehens­ive investigat­ion of the facts so we could hold wrongdoers within football accountabl­e and cooperate with the authoritie­s,” Infantino said in the FIFA statement.

Swiss prosecutor­s “will continue to pursue those who enriched themselves and abused their positions of trust in football,” he added.

The statement from Zurichbase­d FIFA gave no further details and said that, because of the criminal inquiries under way, it was “legally restricted from releasing or commenting on the findings from its internal investigat­ion.”

FIFA said the Swiss authori- ties had acknowledg­ed its “close and consistent cooperatio­n.”

Blatter has already been banned for six years and Valcke for 10 by FIFA’s own ethics committee.

Both have denied wrongdoing and Valcke has appealed to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS). Blatter has already lost an appeal at CAS.

In September, FIFA opened a new ethics investigat­ion into Blatter, Valcke and former finance director Markus Kattner for possible violations including bribery and corruption.

FIFA said then that the allegation­s were in the context of salaries and bonuses paid to the three.

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