Valcke denies receiving 'undue advantages' from Al-Khelaifi
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[October 14, 2017]
PARIS (Reuters) - 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
Thursday 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 soccer'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 seven million euros ($8.3 million) 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.
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FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke addressing a news conference
after a meeting of the FIFA executive committee in Zurich September
26, 2014. Reuters/Arnd Wiegmann/Files Picture Supplied by Action
Images
BeIN Media denied any wrongdoing on Thursday and said it was
cooperating with officials. But a spokesman at France's financial
prosecutor's office on Friday 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.
After being sacked from his post in January 2016, he was initially
banned for 12 years, which was reduced to 10 by FIFA's own appeal
committee last June. He has denied wrongdoing and is now appealing
at the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS).
On Friday, a FIFA spokesman said they would be looking into the
issues raised by the OAG probe.
"We can confirm that the Investigatory Chamber of the independent
Ethics Committee will initiate a preliminary investigation into the
matter," the spokesman said.
(Reporting by Julien Pretot; Additional reporting by Joshua
Franklin, Gavin Jones, Ingrid Melander; Editing by Toby Davis,
Christian Radnedge and Rex Gowar)
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