The Borneo Post

Top Indonesian football official questioned in match-fixing scandal

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JAKARTA: Indonesia’s top football official, who has been in the job less than a month, was questioned by police Monday over a match-fixing scandal that has rocked the Southeast Asian nation’s domestic league.

Joko Driyono became acting president of the Football Associatio­n of Indonesia ( PSSI) in late January after former chairman Edy Rahmayadi stepped down in the wake of a corruption probe that has seen police identify more than a dozen suspects.

Driyono was questioned Monday over allegation­s he was involved in destroying evidence of matchfixin­g, national police spokesman Dedi Prasetyo said.

“The main focus of today’s examinatio­n concerns the problem of destructio­n, theft and removal of evidence ,” Prasetyo told reporters.

Police raided Driyono’s apartment last week and confiscate­d laptops, flash drives and dozens of documents, including match and financial records. He has been slapped with a 20day travel ban but has not yet been arrested. Indonesian football has recently been rocked by a series of matchfixin­g allegation­s. The PSSI and police announced a crackdown on match- fixing in December after an executive member of the associatio­n was caught on tape trying to bribe a coach approximat­ely US$10,000 to throw a second- division game. He resigned and was handed a three-year ban and fine by a PSSI disciplina­ry committee. While it has a low internatio­nal profile, Indonesia has attracted Premier League players including former Chelsea star Michael Essien and Tot tenham Hotspur midfielder Didier Zokora. But Indonesian football has been tarnished on the global stage by a host of problems over the years, including deadly hooliganis­m and foreign players dying after going unpaid and being unable to afford medical care.

 ??  ?? Joko Driyono
Joko Driyono

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