Malta Independent

Olympic power broker Sheikh Ahmad found guilty of forgery

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Olympic power broker Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahad al-Sabah of Kuwait was found guilty on Friday of forgery linked to implicatin­g his political rivals in Kuwait in a coup plot — a verdict that puts his long career in global sports politics at risk. Sheikh Ahmad, his English former lawyer, a Kuwaiti aide and two more lawyers based in Geneva in 2014 were convicted on forgery charges linked to orchestrat­ing a sham arbitratio­n case in the upscale Swiss city.

The sheikh was sentenced to almost 14 months' jail time with a further 15 months suspended in a case that has put much of his Olympic work on hold for almost three years.

The panel of three judges found the five men took part in a staged legal dispute and arbitratio­n hearing to gain a favorable ruling. It sought to authentica­te video footage that would show two Kuwaiti politician­s — including a former prime minister — discussing a possible coup in the oilrich kingdom.

Sheikh Ahmad supported the false arbitratio­n and was its sole beneficiar­y, presiding judge Delphine Gonseth said.

His sentence was more severe than the public prosecutor had requested — just six months' jail time with a further two years suspended.

WHO IS SHEIKH AHMAD?

One of the most influentia­l Olympic officials of the past decade known as the "kingmaker" of internatio­nal sports elections.

Since 1991 he's led the Olympic Council of Asia (OCA) created by his father. One year later he joined the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee whose members elect host cities. Sheikh Ahmad's influence grew in 2012 when he was elected president of ANOC, the global group of 206 national Olympic committees. He also chaired an IOC panel that distribute­s hundreds of millions of dollars to Olympic athletes and teams.

He was a strong supporter in the 2013 election of current IOC president Thomas Bach.

The sheikh stepped aside — "temporaril­y self-suspended" in the Olympic phrase — from the IOC and ANOC after being indicted by Geneva prosecutor­s in November 2018. He continued to lead the OCA until stepping aside Friday.

The IOC said Friday the "court decision is now being reviewed by the IOC chief ethics and compliance officer."

He was also an executive committee member at FIFA for two years but resigned in 2017 after being implicated by U.S. federal prosecutor­s in bribing Asian soccer officials. As a member of Kuwait's ruling family, the 58year-old sheikh has been a government minister and in 2005 was secretary general of the OPEC cartel of oil-producing nations.

WHAT WAS THE CASE ABOUT?

Allegation­s of a coup implicatin­g a rival faction in Kuwait's ruling al-Sabah family.

In 2013 Sheikh Ahmad presented video footage to Kuwaiti authoritie­s that alleged to show a former prime minister, Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammed al-Sabah, and a former speaker in parliament, Jassim al-Kharafi, discussing a coup. The two men could have faced the death penalty for treason.

Lawyers for Sheikh Nasser alMohammed and the al-Kharafi family filed a criminal complaint in 2015 in Geneva, which is a world hub for commercial arbitratio­n. The forgery charges center on a 2014 arbitratio­n case in Geneva, later presented to the High Court in London, that sought to verify the videos.

Prosecutor­s said the sham legal dispute involved backdated documents and a shell company in Delaware the defendants controlled that led to a staged arbitratio­n case.

The case was "the scenario of a thriller," a lawyer for Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammed, Jean-Pierre Jacquemoud, said in court.

Prosecutor Stéphane Grodecki said the case should focus on the alleged faked arbitratio­n process, not the authentici­ty of video footage.

WHO WAS CHARGED?

Sheikh Ahmad, a Kuwaiti who prosecutor­s say was a trusted aide, and three lawyers based in Geneva in 2014.

English lawyer Matthew Parish was tried in his absence and sentenced to three years' jail time. Judge Gonseth said he was an arbitratio­n expert and "manifestly" involved at all stages of the process.

The aide, Hamad al-Haroun, was sentenced to serve 15 months with a further 15 months suspended. He lives in London after being granted asylum since 2014.

The arbitrator, Stoyan Baumeyer, who was allegedly paid 10,000 Swiss francs ($10,900) to sign the judgment, and another lawyer, Vitaly Kozachenko who worked with Parish, got lesser suspended sentences.

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