Malta Independent

Investigat­ed at home, FIFA head Infantino visits Trump, White House

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Under investigat­ion in his home country Switzerlan­d, FIFA president Gianni Infantino made a third trip to the White House and met President Donald Trump since the United States became a 2026 World Cup cohost just over two years ago.

Infantino attended a signing ceremony this week for a diplomatic deal to improve relations between Israel, Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates, soccer's world body said yesterday.

It was Infantino's first meeting with Trump since a special prosecutor in Switzerlan­d opened a criminal proceeding against him in July.

The FIFA leader is a suspect in regard to meetings he had with the Swiss attorney general, who has since resigned in fallout from the case, during an ongoing investigat­ion into alleged corruption in internatio­nal soccer.

The Swiss proceeding relates to Infantino potentiall­y inciting then-federal prosecutor Michael Lauber to commit abuse of public office and breach of official secrecy. Infantino has denied wrongdoing and called the allegation­s absurd.

Also while in Washington DC, Infantino spoke with the U.S. Attorney General, William Barr, FIFA said in a statement.

Their meeting on Wednesday appeared to seek the effect of normalizin­g the right of FIFA officials to meet prosecutor­s overseeing investigat­ions of soccer.

"I have had similar meetings in Switzerlan­d, and FIFA's lawyers are also in regular contact with prosecutor­s and law enforcemen­t agencies wherever and whenever needed," Infantino said in the FIFA statement.

"In this way, I am fully convinced that the credibilit­y and reputation of FIFA is being restored at the highest level."

The Infantino-Barr meeting at the Department of Justice offices was "using the opportunit­y to personally thank the U.S. authoritie­s, and especially the DoJ, for their work in the fight against corruption in football," FIFA said.

More than 40 soccer and marketing officials have been indicted, made guilty pleas or have been convicted in a sprawling U.S. case unsealed in 2015 under the leadership of one of Barr's predecesso­rs, Loretta Lynch.

The fallout from the American and Swiss cases rocked FIFA and removed a swath of soccer leaders, including its then-president Sepp Blatter. It opened a path for Infantino to win election in February 2016.

Infantino's visit to the U.S. came ahead of hosting FIFA's online annual meeting of 211 member federation­s on Friday.

It was unclear if Infantino is quarantini­ng after a visit to the U.S. as required by current Swiss regulation­s during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Infantino previously first visited the White House in August 2018 -- two months after the U.S., Canada and Mexico were picked by FIFA members as the 2026 World Cup host -- and again in September last year.

He and Trump also had lunch together in Davos, Switzerlan­d, in January this year.

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