Gulf Today

Swiss indict ex-german soccer officials over WC payment

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LAUSANNE: Swiss prosecutor­s said Tuesday they had charged three former German Football Associatio­n (DFB) officials, including ex-president Theo Zwanziger, with fraud relating to the 2006 World Cup.

In a statement the atorney general’s office said the accused “are alleged to have fraudulent­ly misled the members of a supervisor­y body of the DFB organising commitee for the 2006 World Cup in Germany “in April 2005 about the true purpose of a payment of around 6.7 million euros.

Hors Schmidt, former secretary of the German football federation, has also been charged with fraud -- along with the Swiss Urs Linsi, secretary general of FIFA from June 1999 to June 2007.

Wolfgang Niersbach, who was a member of the 2006 bid commitee and vice-president of the organising commitee, has been charged with complicity in fraud.

Charges of money-laundering were dismissed in July, the OAG said.

All four have denied the claims.

“This whole Swiss campaign is wretched, malicious and will completely fail, because I have nothing to reproach myself for,” Zwanziger told AFP subsidiary SID.

“These incompeten­t investigat­ors are banging their heads against a brick wall, and the wall will always win. The whole thing has long been a judiciary scandal and there has been no truly reproachab­le behaviour on the part of the accused.”

Proceeding­s against Franz Beckenbaue­r, a football legend in Germany, also implicated in the investigat­ion, have been deferred because of the 1974 World Cup winning captain’s ill health.

The atorney general’s statement said that Beckenbaue­r “is unable for health reasons to participat­e or to be questioned in the main hearing in the Federal Criminal Court (FCC).”

The announceme­nt comes at the end of an investigat­ion which opened in November 2015 into a payment of 6.7 million euros made in 2005 by the DFB to Robert Louis-dreyfus, former head of Adidas, a partner of the DFB.

The German weekly Der Spiegel broke the story in late October 2015 when it claimed that Germany used a secret fund of 10 million Swiss francs (6.7 million euros at the time) to buy votes in the bid to stage the 2006 World Cup.

“This sum was used to fund various payments made via a Swiss law firm to a Qatari company belonging to Mohammed Bin Hammam,” the statement said.

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