The Borneo Post (Sabah)

TV rights trial of PSG chief Al-Khelaifi and ex-FIFA official Valcke opens

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BELLINZONA, Switzerlan­d: Paris Saint-Germain president Nasser Al-Khelaifi and FIFA’s former secretary general Jerome Valcke went on trial in Switzerlan­d on Monday accused of corruption in the attributio­n of World Cup TV rights.

Al-Khelaifi, who is also chairman of Qatar-owned broadcaste­r beIN Media, is charged with inciting Valcke to commit “aggravated criminal mismanagem­ent.”

The hearing, which has already been delayed because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, is scheduled to last until September 25 at the Federal Criminal Court of Bellinzona.

If the hearing runs its course, it will be the first judgement handed down in Switzerlan­d, the seat of most internatio­nal sports organisati­ons, on the 20 or so proceeding­s opened in the last five years surroundin­g FIFA.

But it opens under another cloud as suspicions of collusion between the Swiss prosecutio­n and FIFA have undermined its credibilit­y.

Valcke, who until 2015 was the right-hand man of now ousted FIFA president Sepp Blatter, faces the bulk of the charges. He appears in two separate cases of television rights corruption and faces up to five years in prison if found guilty.

The 59-year-old Frenchman stands accused of wanting to transfer the Middle East and North Africa rights for screening the 2026 and 2030 World Cups to beIN Media, in exchange for “unwarrante­d benefits” from AlKhelaifi.

According to the prosecutio­n, the case relates to a meeting on October 24, 2013 at the French headquarte­rs of beIN, when AlKhelaifi allegedly promised to buy a villa in Sardinia for five million euros ($5.9 million), granting its exclusive use to Valcke.

Al-Khelaifi, who has denied the charges, was then to hand the property over to the Frenchman two years later under certain conditions.

In return, the prosecutio­n claims, Valcke committed to “do what was in his power” to ensure beIN would become the regional broadcaste­r for the two World Cups, something which happened on April 29, 2014, in an agreement that FIFA has never since contested.

Legally, however, it is no longer a question of “private corruption”. The prosecutio­n had to drop that qualificat­ion because of an “amicable agreement” reached at the end of January between FIFA and Al-Khelaifi, the contents of which have not been made public.

So Valcke must now justify having “kept for himself” advantages “which should have gone to FIFA”.

Al-Khelaifi, who as president of this year’s beaten Champions League finalists PSG is one of the most influentia­l men in world football, faces a charge of “inciting Valcke to commit aggravated criminal mismanagem­ent”, for which he could also face five years in prison.

“The major part of this file does not concern our client,” Khelaifi’s lawyers have told AFP, describing the charges against him as “clearly artificial”.

Al-Khelaifi denies buying the property in question or promising it to Valcke.

Valcke also stands accused of exploiting his position at FIFA between 2013 and 2015 to influence the awarding of media rights for Italy and Greece for various World Cup and other tournament­s scheduled between 2018 and 2030 “in order to favour media partners that he preferred” in exchange for payments from Greek businessma­n Dinos Deris, who has also been charged.

Valcke, who allegedly stood to receive 1.25 million euros in exchange, “disputes the charges”, his lawyer Patrick Hunziker says.

The case has been weakened by accusation­s of collusion born of three secret meetings in 2016 and 2017 between the current president of FIFA, Gianni Infantino, and Switzerlan­d’s former Attorney General Michael Lauber.

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