Gulf Times - Gulf Times Sport

Top Belgian football clubs rocked by fraud, match-fixing probe

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Police raids across Europe yesterday sent shockwaves through Belgium’s top football league as prosecutor­s targeted the country’s biggest clubs over alleged fraudulent transfers and match-fixing.

A total of 220 police officers carried out 44 house searches across Belgium and in France, Luxembourg, Cyprus, Montenegro, Serbia and Macedonia, Belgian prosecutor­s said.

“A great number of persons have been deprived of their liberty and taken in for a thorough interrogat­ion,” said a statement from investigat­ors. The arrests focused on well-known football agent Mogi Bayat, the former manager of Sporting Charleroi, who was arrested in his home on suspected links to crooked transfer deals.

Club Brugge coach Ivan Leko, whose team is playing in the Champions League this season, was also arrested yesterday, a source close to the investigat­ion said. The headquarte­rs of Club Brugge, Standard Liege, Anderlecht and KRC Genk, the current leader of the Belgian Premier League, were searched in the operation, the source added.

At Standard Liege police seized contracts involving players Obbi Oulare, Michel Preudhomme and Dino Arslanagic that were all linked to Bayat. Club Brugge and Anderlecht said they will fully cooperate with the investigat­ion. “Club Brugge has nothing to hide,” chairman Bart Verhaeghe said. Anderlecht “gives its full cooperatio­n and makes no further comments”, said spokesman David Steegen. The house searches outside Belgium were mainly connected to the suspect transfer schemes, said prosecutor­s.

Cypriot police said they arrested a 52-year-old foreigner on a European warrant in connection with the case. The offences were mainly committed in Belgium, but also in Cyprus and other European countries between 2012 and 2018, said Cypriot police.

Legal procedures are now underway to extradite the man to Belgium and evidence collected will also be handed over to the Belgian authoritie­s. Suspicion of match-fixing emerged during the fraud investigat­ion, with a focus put on matches played in the 2017-18 season, prosecutor­s said.

The investigat­ion started in late 2017 as a result of a report drawn up by the Sports Fraud Cell. That entity had received a complaint from Westerlo football club, which currently plays in Belgium’s lower division 1B, following a Kortrijk-Mouscron match in March 2017, club president Herman Wynants said. Mouscron won the match and remained in the top league, relegating Westerlo. According to media reports, Bayat had several players from Kortrijk and Mouscron in his client portfolio with another match involving Mouscron and Qatar-owned Eupen also under suspicion.

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