Malta Independent

Swimming body clears Kuwaiti official for re-election

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Though linked to a bribery case, Kuwaiti official Husain alMusallam has been cleared to be re-elected unopposed Saturday as the senior vice president of swimming's governing body.

"There was no case to answer based on the informatio­n that is available to FINA at this time," the governing body of world swimming said Wednesday in a statement.

FINA said in May it would "take all measures deemed necessary" after al-Musallam was identified in United States federal documents as "co-conspirato­r #3" in a FIFA bribery case.

In Brooklyn federal court, FIFA audit committee member Richard Lai of Guam said he was paid six-figure bribes through the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) to advance the soccer interests of Kuwaiti officials.

Al-Musallam has been director general since 2005 of Kuwaitbase­d OCA, which is led by Olympic powerbroke­r Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahad al-Sabah. The sheikh, who also leads the global group of national Olympic committees, was identified as "coconspira­tor #2" in court documents and resigned from the FIFA Council.

"Moreover there was no breach of any FINA regulation­s," said the Switzerlan­d-based organizati­on, which will hold its election congress on Saturday on the sidelines of the world championsh­ips in Budapest, Hungary.

Al-Musallam has also been allowed to go for re-election to his No. 2 position on the FINA Bureau, the body's ruling committee, despite the Kuwaiti swimming federation being suspended since October 2015. That was because of government interferen­ce in the independen­t running of sports bodies.

Further claims against alMusallam about commission­s allegedly sought from OCA sponsorshi­p deals in 2012 were made Wednesday by British daily The Times and German magazine Spiegel.

Sheikh Ahmad and al-Musallam have continued as members of the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee's Olympic Solidarity Commission since the Brooklyn court hearing in April. The sheikh chairs the panel which has about $500 million to distribute to Olympic and sports bodies ahead of the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

The IOC has previously said its ethics commission is in contact with FINA, FIFA and the OCA.

"We have taken note of the allegation­s and have passed them to the IOC's Chief Ethics and Compliance Officer," the IOC said Wednesday about the Times and Speigel reports.

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