Malta Independent

World Cup bribery case opened against Valcke and PSG president

- Photo: AP Photo: AP

The Qatari president of one of Europe’s most glamorous football clubs, Paris Saint-Germain, is under investigat­ion by Swiss prosecutor­s for suspected bribery of a top FIFA executive to get World Cup broadcasti­ng rights.

Criminal proceeding­s against Nasser Al-Khelaifi, PSG president and CEO of Qatar-owned BeIN Media Group, former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke, and an unnamed “businessma­n in the sports rights sector” was announced by the office of Switzerlan­d’s attorney general yesterday.

The case involves the award of broadcast rights for the next four World Cups from 2018 through 2030.

The proceeding against Al-Khelaifi is one of the first direct links to Qatar in sweeping investigat­ions by federal law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in Switzerlan­d, the United States, and France of FIFA, internatio­nal football, and the 2018-2022 World Cup bidding contests.

The Paris offices of BeIN Sports were searched by two magistrate­s from the French financial prosecutor’s office, the federal agency said. They were assisted by investigat­ors from an anti-corruption unit.

Properties were also searched in Greece, Italy, and Spain while Valcke was questioned in Switzerlan­d, the Swiss federal prosecutio­n office said. It cited cooperatio­n from a European Union criminal investigat­ion agency.

“Multiple premises were searched, assets were seized and interviews were conducted as a result of this joint operation,” the EU body known as Eurojust said in a statement.

Valcke did not immediatel­y respond to an email request for comment. PSG declined to comment. No suspect was detained yesterday, said Swiss prosecutor­s whose work investigat­ing FIFA and suspected money laundering linked to World Cup hosting bids began in November 2014.

Then, FIFA gave the Swiss federal office a report and evidence from its then-ethics prosecutor — former U.S. Attorney Michael Garcia — into the dual World Cup bidding contest won by Russia and Qatar.

Al-Khelaifi is alleged to have offered “undue advantages” to Valcke — FIFA’s CEO-like secretary general from 2007 until his firing in January 2016 — for the award of media rights in “certain countries” for the 2026 and 2030 World Cup.

Al-Khelaifi and Valcke previously worked on a deal for the 2018 and 2022 rights weeks after Qatar won the 2022 hosting vote. In January 2011, FIFA announced that Al Jazeera Sports — which later became BeIN — secured the rights for 23 territorie­s across the Middle East and North Africa, including Saudi Arabia.

FIFA has never announced if BeIN also secured any 2026 and 2030 World Cup rights.

Swiss prosecutor­s also allege Valcke received “undue advantages” from a businessma­n who was not identified to award certain media rights for four World Cups from 2018 through 2030.

The criminal proceeding was opened on March 20, but announced only yesterday, the Swiss federal office said.

Al-Khelaifi’s profile has risen in recent weeks as PSG pursued and sealed a world record transfer of Brazil star Neymar from Barcelona for €222 million as they target a first Champions League title.

After PSG’s offseason spree signed off by Al-Khelaifi, European football body UEFA opened its own case into possible violation of football-specific rules designed to curb excessive spending by clubs on transfer fees and wages.

Since FIFA’s much-discredite­d executive committee picked Russia and Qatar in December 2010, the gas-rich emirate has bought up PSG with sovereign wealth and installed Al-Khelaifi as president. BeIN has also acquired a broad portfolio of rights including from UEFA for the Champions League and national team matches.

Al-Khelaifi’s rising status in European football has seen him earn a seat on UEFA’s strategy panel as a delegate of top clubs.

UEFA also declined to comment yesterday.

The latest case stemming from the wider investigat­ion of FIFA’s business also saw criminal proceeding­s opened against Valcke in March 2016.

Valcke was the right-hand man to then-FIFA president Sepp Blatter for more than eight years until a swathe of senior executives at football’s world body was removed from office in fallout from a U.S. Department of Justice indictment revealed in May 2015.

Valcke, a French former TV presenter, was in Switzerlan­d on Wednesday to testify at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport in his appeal hearing against a 10-year ban by FIFA for financial wrongdoing and abuse of expenses.

FIFA said yesterday it “fully supports the investigat­ion” by Swiss and other authoritie­s.

“FIFA has constitute­d itself as a damaged party in this investigat­ion,” the Zurich-based organizati­on said.

FIFA is seeking a share of more than $200 million held by the U.S. Department of Justice which secured forfeits from soccer and marketing officials in its ongoing investigat­ion. The DoJ has indicted or secured guilty pleas from more than 40 people.

In the three-year Swiss investigat­ion of internatio­nal football, prosecutor­s said yesterday they have details of 180 suspicious transactio­ns through banks in the country and opened “around 25” criminal proceeding­s.

 ??  ?? Former FIFA General Secretary Jerome Valcke
Former FIFA General Secretary Jerome Valcke
 ??  ?? PSG President Nasser Al-Khelaifi
PSG President Nasser Al-Khelaifi

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