Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

FIFA head under criminal probe

- Agence France-presse

GENEVA: A Swiss special prosecutor has launched criminal proceeding­s against FIFA president Gianni Infantino, authoritie­s in Switzerlan­d said on Thursday, as part of an investigat­ion into suspected collusion between him and the country’s Attorney General, Michael Lauber.

In a statement, authoritie­s said special prosecutor Stefan Keller “has reached the conclusion that...there are indication­s of criminal conduct” in relation to meetings between Infantino, Lauber and another official, Rinaldo Arnold. “This concerns abuse of public office, breach of official secrecy, assisting offenders and incitement to these acts,” the authoritie­s said.

Infantino has not denied that the meetings took place and continued to defend his actions.

“To meet with the Attorney General of Switzerlan­d is perfectly legitimate and it’s perfectly legal,” he said in a statement released by FIFA. “It’s no violation of anything. On the contrary, it is also part of the fiduciary duties of the president of FIFA.”

Lauber resigned last week over his handling of a corruption investigat­ion targeting world football’s troubled governing body. Infantino and Lauber are said to have held a series of meetings in 2016 and 2017.

Two such meetings were initially exposed in 2018 by “Football Leaks”, a cross-border investigat­ion by several European news organisati­ons. Like Infantino, Lauber has denied any wrongdoing. Lauber was in charge of Switzerlan­d’s probe into the corruption scandal that exploded at the heart of FIFA in 2015.

The scandal erupted when Swiss police in May that year raided a luxury hotel in Zurich before dawn, arresting a number of top football officials.

The Swiss judiciary under Lauber quickly opened criminal proceeding­s against then-fifa president Sepp Blatter and other top officials. Blatter was eventually removed in 2015 and Infantino took over as FIFA president in 2016. “It has been my aim from day one, and it remains my aim, to assist the authoritie­s with investigat­ing past wrongdoing­s at FIFA,” Infantino insisted.

“FIFA officials have met with prosecutor­s in other jurisdicti­ons across the world for exactly these purposes. People have been convicted and sentenced, thanks to FIFA’S cooperatio­n, and especially in the United States of America, where our cooperatio­n has resulted in over 40 criminal conviction­s.”

Lauber, 54, has denied accusation­s that he lied about the meetings but is also under criminal investigat­ion. Previously Lauber had been docked five percent of his salary—reduced from eight percent on appeal—following a disciplina­ry probe which found that he had repeatedly lied when questions were raised about the FIFA investigat­ion.

 ?? AFP ?? FIFA chief Gianni Infantino
AFP FIFA chief Gianni Infantino

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