The Star Malaysia

Valcke denies receiving undue advantages from Al-Khelaifi

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PARIS: Former FIFA general secretary Jerome Valcke has denied receiving “undue advantages” from Nasser Al-Khelaifi, the chief executive of Qatar’s beIN Media and president of Paris St Germain, after Swiss prosecutor­s opened a criminal investigat­ion.

The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerlan­d (OAG) said on Friday it suspected Valcke accepted “undue advantages” from Al-Khelaifi in connection with the award of media rights for the 2026 and 2030 World Cups.

On Friday, world football’s governing body FIFA said they were opening an investigat­ion into the issues raised by the Swiss probe.

Italian finance police said they had seized a villa in Sardinia worth ¤7mil (RM34.8mil) which Swiss prosecutor­s believed was made available to Valcke by Al-Khelaifi as a bribe to try to secure the media rights.

The villa was seized from an unnamed internatio­nal property company in connection with crimes including fraud, corruption and forging documents, the finance police from the Sardinian city of Sassari said in a statement.

It followed an investigat­ion led by the Swiss police, which also involved investigat­ors in France, Greece, Italy and Spain.

“I just want to say that it’s not true. I have never done that. I have never received anything in exchange for anything,” Valcke told French sports daily L’Equipe on Friday.

“I refute the accusation­s against me or Nasser. I have received nothing from Nasser, I can assure you. There was never any exchange between Nasser and I. Never.”

Valcke was Sepp Blatter’s right-hand man when the latter ran FIFA, the Swiss-based world soccer body.

BeIN Media denied any wrongdoing on Thursday and said it was cooperatin­g with officials but a spokesman at France’s financial prosecutor’s office said beIN’s cooperatio­n was ”minimal.”

“BeIN staff refused the downloadin­g of data from servers based in Doha,” the spokesman said.

Valcke is serving a 10-year ban from football after he was found guilty by FIFA’s former ethics judge Hans-Joachim Eckert of misconduct over the sale of World Cup tickets, abuse of travel expenses, attempting to sell TV rights below their market value and destructio­n of evidence. — Reuters

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