Imperial Valley Press

Ousted FIFA ethics prosecutor: ‘Several 100 cases’ ongoing

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MANAMA, Bahrain (AP) — Hundreds of prosecutio­ns of suspected wrongdoing by soccer officials will be affected by President Gianni Infantino firing FIFA’s top judge and prosecutor.

The ousted investigat­or, Cornel Borbely, said Wednesday that the workload — heavier than even most FIFA critics imagined — of the ethics committee will be impeded by the firing that Infantino sprung on his ruling council a day earlier.

On Wednesday, Infantino declined to discuss the reasons for not handing new terms to Swiss prosecutor Borbely and German judge Hans-Joachim Eckert.

The FIFA leader also insisted its image had not been damaged by the fallout — despite widespread comparison­s of him with President Donald Trump, who also fired a top investigat­or on Tuesday.

“We are positive,” said Infantino, whose reputation for acquiring and wielding executive power matches that of predecesso­r Sepp Blatter.

Amid mounting criticism of the Infantino’s purge of the men who have banned soccer’s top officials in recent years, only one member of his council broke rank to publicly question the decision.

“I said in the meeting that we were satisfied with the work of both people,” German federation president Reinhard Grindel said, referencin­g Eckert and Borbely. “I asked because the general secretary (Fatma Samoura) made a statement in the media a few weeks ago that they will support both. And so it is a decision of the president that he makes the proposal ... you have to ask Infantino why he made this proposal.”

Only a day before Tuesday’s council meeting, Grindel said he asked Samoura’s office “if there were any announceme­nts that Borbely and Eckert will be displaced and they said no, they had no informatio­n.”

Eckert and Borbely said they discovered they were being removed from heading the two FIFA ethics chambers on their phones as they arrived in Bahrain on Tuesday for the FIFA Congress.

“First I was astonished, second I was disappoint­ed because I am trying to ask myself, ‘Have I done something wrong?’” Eckert said in an interview. “You think about yourself and I didn’t find anything. I really don’t know because nobody (from FIFA) speaks with me up to now.”

The departing ethics officials said the process of bringing corrupt officials to justice will now stall as new ethics officials have to learn how to navigate the global FIFA structures. Borbely said his “removal was unnecessar­y and because of that political,” and called it a “setback for the fight against corruption.”

“We investigat­ed several hundred cases and several hundred are still pending and ongoing at this moment,” Borbely added at a joint news conference with Eckert. “Imagine where FIFA would be today without an ethics committee.”

Current investigat­ions include Russian Deputy Prime Minister Vitaly Mutko for links to covering up doping cases. A judgment in that case could remove Mutko from heading the 2018 World Cup organizing committee, after he was already forced to cede his FIFA Council seat.

German soccer great Frank Beckenbaue­r and Olympic powerbroke­r Sheikh Ahmad al-Fahad al-Sabah of Kuwait are also under suspicion in cases of suspected fraud and bribery, respective­ly.

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