Arab Times

FIFA panel opens probes into S. Africa match-fixing cases

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ZURICH, Aug 24, (RTRS): FIFA’s ethics watchdog has opened formal proceeding­s against ex-South Africa football chief Kirsten Nematandan­i and two other functionar­ies over alleged violations connected to fixing internatio­nal friendlies in 2010, it said on Wednesday.

The adjudicato­ry chamber of global soccer body FIFA’s independen­t Ethics Committee said it opened cases against Nematandan­i, former Zimbabwe Football Associatio­n official Jonathan Musavengan­a and former Togo national team coach Bana Tchanile.

A FIFA investigat­or last week proposed at least a six-year ban and 10,000 Swiss franc ($10,340) fine for Nematandan­i over alleged ethics violations.

The investigat­or, Djimbaraye Bourngar, had also recommende­d life bans for Musavengan­a and Tchanile for alleged bribery and corruption violations.

The three officials will now be invited to submit their positions and may request a hearing, the adjudicato­ry chamber said in a statement.

Tchanile has already been banned from soccer for three years by his national federation after taking a team masqueradi­ng as the Togo national side to play a friendly with Bahrain in 2010.

Investigat­ions by FIFA have concentrat­ed on warm-up matches South Africa played against Thailand, Bulgaria, Colombia and Guatemala in May 2010 ahead of the World Cup which the country hosted.

Match-fixing is often organised by betting syndicates who make money by correctly gambling on the result of the game they have manipulate­d.

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