Oman Daily Observer

Chelsea cleared by the Premier League

ABUSE CLAIMS: The Premier League said it has insisted Chelsea have an independen­t expert carry out an audit

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LONDON: The present Chelsea regime did not break any rules in keeping quiet about allegation­s of sex abuse suffered by former youth player Gary Johnson, the English Premier League said.

“After careful considerat­ion, the board has determined that no Premier League rules were broken by the club not reporting this matter to them in 2014,” the Premier League said in a statement on Thursday. The Premier League said it has insisted that Chelsea — whose present owner Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich took over years after the abuse — have an independen­t expert carry out a full safeguardi­ng audit.

“The League has no reason to have any concerns about Chelsea’s current provisions in this area, but, given the seriousnes­s of these historical allegation­s, feels that such a review is an appropriat­e course of action,” it added.

Chelsea additional­ly has to provide the Premier League with details of the club’s internal review on historic abuse, launched after Johnson and several other former players came forward to claim they had been abused by scout Eddie Heath back in the 1970’s.

The Premier League said Chelsea has agreed to the requests.

The club and Abramovich have been lambasted for imposing a gagging order as a condition of paying Johnson £50,000 ($63,850, 59,230 euros) compensati­on in 2015 for the abuse he suffered at the hands of Heath.

Johnson, now 57, broke the gagging order once other former footballer­s had come forward to claim they had been victims of sex abuse decades ago and he told the BBC he would be seeking greater compensati­on from Chelsea as the abuse had “taken away his childhood”.

There has been some speculatio­n that Chelsea could face a group action law suit that could potentiall­y cost them millions. ‘PHONING FROM THE MOON’ Heath, who died in 1983 aged 54, was sacked by Chelsea in 1979 by then manager Geoff Hurst, not for sexual impropriet­y but because he spent more time decorating his office than scouting.

He moved on to another London club, Charlton Athletic, where a former youth player alleges he was abused by him. It is not known whether Chelsea are one of the four London-based Premier League teams under police investigat­ion over historic abuse. Twenty-six other clubs from the capital are also involved.

However, former detective Clive Driscoll said on Friday that Chelsea and another current Premier League club, Crystal Palace, had dismissed his warning in 2001 about another scout.

John Butcher had been convicted in 1993 of attempting to smuggle child abuse images Netherland­s.

“I spoke to Millwall, Chelsea and Palace about Butcher and warned them about him in 2001,” Driscoll told The Times. “I was a detective inspector at the time and I was phoning them from the police, but I might as well have been phoning from the moon. “I was saying he had a conviction but they just treated it as a football matter,” said Driscoll, who into England from the during his career successful­ly brought the white killers of black teenager Stephen Lawrence to trial after years of frustratio­n over the initial investigat­ion.

According to the informatio­n gathered by Operation Hydrant — the UK-wide police investigat­ion into nonrecent child sexual abuse — 148 clubs are now involved, with 155 potential suspects and 429 victims, aged between four and 20.

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