Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Infantino to ‘respect’ any ethics committee decision: Fifa

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LAUSANNE — Fifa president Gianni Infantino will “respect any decision by the ethics committee”, world football’s governing body said Monday after Swiss authoritie­s opened criminal proceeding­s against him last week.

A Swiss special prosecutor has launched proceeding­s against Infantino, as part of an investigat­ion into suspected collusion with the country’s attorney general, Michael Lauber. Both have denied any wrongdoing.

“I’ve no doubt that Gianni Infantino would respect any decision by the ethics commission,” Fifa deputy secretary general Alasdair Bell told a video news conference. “We don’t see any evidence of criminal or unethical behaviour,” he said.

Fifa on Sunday insisted Infantino would continue to fulfil his duties as president and blasted the Swiss probe.

It gave no indication yesterday whether or not its ethics committee had instigated proceeding­s against Infantino.

“The ethics committee will have to come to its own conclusion... In every case, it needs to be tested, if there’s something serious, there’s a case for suspension,” said

Bell.

Questioned about Infantino’s absence during yesterday’s video conference, Bell said the Fifa chief “will be available and will speak in order to clear his name.”

He added: “Fifa and Gianni Infantino have absolutely nothing to hide, we want to be transparen­t. There’s no factual basis for this criminal procedure.”

Infantino and Lauber are said to have held a series of meetings in 2016 and 2017.

Two such meetings were initially exposed in 2018 by “Football Leaks”, a cross-border investigat­ion by several European news organisati­ons.

In a statement Thursday, Swiss authoritie­s said special prosecutor Stefan Keller “has reached the conclusion that... there are indication­s of criminal conduct” in relation to meetings between Infantino, Lauber and another official, Rinaldo Arnold.

“This concerns abuse of public office, breach of official secrecy, assisting offenders and incitement to these acts,” the authoritie­s said.

Lauber, who offered his resignatio­n on July 24, was in charge of Switzerlan­d’s probe into the towering corruption scandal that exploded at the heart of Zurich-based Fifa in 2015.

But he was forced to recuse himself from the investigat­ion in June 2019, following media revelation­s that he had held several undeclared meetings with Infantino during the probe.

Switzerlan­d has pursued a number of cases since a raid on a luxury hotel in

Zurich in May 2015 led to the arrests of a several Fifa executives and exposed an allegedly corrupt underbelly in world football.

In total, more than 20 Fifa proceeding­s have been opened in Switzerlan­d over the past five years into allegation­s of corruption and vote-buying, and allegation­s over the awarding of television rights contracts. — AFP.

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Gianni Infantino

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