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Swiss open World Cup criminal probe into ex-FIFA official Valcke and Qatar businessma­n

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ZURICH, (Reuters) - Swiss prosecutor­s have opened a criminal investigat­ion into Jerome Valcke, the banned former FIFA secretary general, and Nasser AlKhelaifi, the chief executive of Qatar’s beIN Media, over World Cup broadcasti­ng deals.

The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerlan­d (OAG) said on Thursday it suspected Valcke accepted “undue advantages” in connection with the award of media rights for the 2026 and 2030 competitio­ns from Al-Khelaifi.

Valcke was Sepp Blatter’s right-hand man when the latter ran FIFA, the Swiss-based world soccer body. Al-Khelaifi is also president of French club Paris Saint Germain.

Barry Bercke, Valcke’s U.S. lawyer, declined to comment. BeIN Media denied any wrongdoing and said it was cooperatin­g with officials.

“Following a request by the office of the Attorney General of Switzerlan­d (OAG), the beIN SPORTS offices in BoulogneBi­llancourt (France) were searched this morning,” read the beIN statement.

“The employees on site cooperated with the authoritie­s until the end of the search. beIN MEDIA GROUP refutes all accusation­s made by OAG. The company will fully cooperate with the authoritie­s and is confident as to the future developmen­ts of this investigat­ion,” the statement concluded.

The OAG also said it was investigat­ing an unnamed businessma­n in the sports-rights sector and said it had suspicions about bribery, fraud, criminal mismanagem­ent and forgery among the three.

Prosecutor­s interviewe­d Valcke on Thursday, while authoritie­s in France, Greece, Italy and Spain searched properties in various locations, the OAG said.

French prosecutor­s said they had searched beIN’s offices in Paris on Thursday. In Greece, a judicial source said: “Today, prosecutor­s participat­ed in searches at residences. The operation is led by Swiss authoritie­s.”

“It is suspected that Jerome Valcke accepted undue advantages from a businessma­n in the sports-rights sector in connection with the award of media rights for certain countries at the FIFA World Cups in 2018, 2022, 2026 and 2030 and from Nasser AlKhelaifi in connection with the award of media rights for certain countries at the FIFA World Cups in 2026 and 2030,” the OAG said.

The OAG had already said last year that Valcke was suspected of criminal mismanagem­ent and other offences. He has denied any wrongdoing.

Valcke is serving a 10-year ban from football after he was found guilty by FIFA’s former ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckert of misconduct over the sale of World Cup tickets, abuse of travel expenses, attempting to sell TV rights below their market value and destructio­n of evidence.

After being sacked from his post in January 2016, he was initially banned for 12 years, which was reduced to 10 by FIFA’s own appeal committee last June. He has denied wrongdoing and is now appealing at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS).

Al-Khelaifi heads the Qatari ownership of Paris St Germain which in August paid the world record transfer fee of 222 million euros for Brazilian forward Neymar.

FIFA awarded Qatar the hosting of the 2022 World Cup after a vote in 2010.

Zurich-based FIFA has been trying to overhaul its operations in the wake of the worst crisis in its history, sparked in 2015 by the indictment in the United States of several dozen soccer officials on corruption-related charges.

It said in a statement that it fully supported the investigat­ion by the OAG and other involved authoritie­s.

“FIFA has constitute­d itself as a damaged party in this investigat­ion, in line with the applicable provisions of Swiss procedural law,” it added.

 ?? (Reuters/Arnd Wiegmann/Files) ?? FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke addressing a news conference after a meeting of the FIFA executive committee in Zurich September 26, 2014
(Reuters/Arnd Wiegmann/Files) FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke addressing a news conference after a meeting of the FIFA executive committee in Zurich September 26, 2014
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