The Malta Independent on Sunday

FINA re- elects top two officials

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Despite fresh bribery allegation­s on top of long- standing accusation­s of wrongdoing, Kuwaiti official Husain al- Musallam was re- elected for another term as senior vice- president of FINA on Saturday.

“Nothing happened against FINA rules. It’s very difficult to do anything. We’re monitoring the situation but we have no proof of anything,” the swimming body’s executive director, Cornel Marculescu, told The Associated Press.

FINA delegates also re- elected the 81- year- old Julio Maglione of Uruguay for a third term as president, two years after the organizati­on changed its rules to remove its age limit.

“The decision of the assembly of FINA was to decide we don’t have age limits,” said Maglione, who defeated the president of European aquatics federation LEN, Paolo Barelli, for an expected victory at FINA’s election congress on the sidelines of the world championsh­ips in Budapest.

Barelli complained that he wasn’t allowed to speak to the bureau before the vote. He said that essentiall­y ended any hopes he had of persuading the governing body to make a change at the top.

“There is a lack of good governance. We need transparen­cy,” Barelli told the AP in an interview before the vote was even completed.

“Where it needed to be shown is during the congress. It is not easy for anybody to understand why the candidate cannot speak. This is unbelievab­le.”

Maglione has been in charge since 2009.

“You must be crazy,” he answered when asked if he planned on stepping down mid- term so al- Musallam could take over the top position. “I was elected for four years.”

Al- Musallam ran unopposed after FINA cleared the Kuwaiti official on Wednesday for re- election despite fresh allegation­s made by British daily The Times and German magazine Der Spiegel that he sought payoffs from sponsorshi­p deals through the Olympic Council of Asia ( OCA) in 2012.

“This is only allegation­s. I am a sportsman. The OCA and the committee of FINA, the committee that investigat­es, they did an investigat­ion and there was no wrongdoing on anything,” alMusallam told the AP.

“People think I am bad. People think I am good. This is normal. We are humans at the end of the day. Let’s enjoy the championsh­ips now.”

Al- Musallam is next in line to take over should Maglione be unable to fulfill his duties.

“We witnessed a very transparen­t election. We witnessed very transparen­t amendments to the constituti­on. We witnessed a very transparen­t debate,” al- Musallam said. “Everybody had a chance to say his opinion, express his opinion about what we want to do for each item. This is really great for us, especially as FINA.”

Al- Musallam was previously identified in United States federal documents as “co- conspirato­r # 3” in a FIFA bribery case, when FIFA audit committee member Richard Lai of Guam told Brooklyn federal court that he was paid six- figure bribes through the OCA to advance the soccer inter- ests of Kuwaiti officials.

“The 57- year- old Kuwaiti said there was no rift with LEN, despite Barelli’s frustratio­n that he had been allowed to run unopposed amid the allegation­s.

“At the end of the day, this is all a family,” al- Musallam said.

Barelli said the Kuwaiti should have been sidelined until after the vote.

“You cannot permit the infec- tion to enter inside the organizati­on. FINA doesn’t have any ( mechanism) to protect themselves from the possibilit­y that something really happened,” Barelli said.

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