The Star Malaysia

No investigat­ion opened into Infantino, say FIFA

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LAUSANNE: Football’s world governing body FIFA assured on Tuesday that “no investigat­ion” had been opened into president Gianni Infantino after sources said his role in the Confederat­ion of African Football’s (CAF) presidenti­al elections was being looked into.

Maria Claudia Rojas, the new president of the investigat­ory chamber of FIFA’s ethics committee, “has confirmed that all files have been handed over to her and that there are no open preliminar­y or investigat­ion proceeding­s involving the FIFA president”, the organisati­on said in a statement.

“It is in FIFA’s interest that the work of the ethics committee is not disrupted by conjecture of any kind,” the statement added.

“Therefore, FIFA will refrain from commenting any further on baseless speculatio­n and will instead concentrat­e on providing concrete informatio­n.”

Sources said on Monday that Swiss prosecutor Cornel Borbely, who was chairman of the ethics committee’s investigat­ory chamber before being removed last month, had opened an investigat­ion into suggestion­s Infantino might have sought to influence the election of Madagascar’s Ahmad Ahmad as president of CAF in March.

The investigat­ion stemmed from evidence provided by African representa­tives, a source close to FIFA said.

Several African witnesses had been set to travel to FIFA headquarte­rs in the Swiss city of Zurich but at least one of them had their summons cancelled after Borbely was removed from his post, the same source said.

British newspaper TheGuardia­n reported on Sunday that Infantino was being investigat­ed for claims he had promised, along with FIFA general secretary Fatma Samoura, to accelerate payments of developmen­t money to national football associatio­ns if the presidents voted for Ahmad.

FIFA announced their decision to remove Borbely and Germany’s Hans-Joachim Eckert from their posts in the ethics team during the organisati­on’s Congress in Bahrain last month.

Borbely said the decision was “a setback in the fight against corruption” as there were “several hundred cases” of corruption pending.

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