Italian police seize villa in World Cup corruption probe

Italian police have seized a luxury villa belonging to PSG chairman and beIN Media chief Nasser al-Khelaifi, which was apparently used as "a means of corruption" in the World Cup media rights scandal.

Published : Oct 14, 2017 01:51 IST

A view of a villa in Porto Cervo which was seized by the Italian Police. Italian police claim the luxury property belonging to Nasser al-Khelaifi, who is also president of Paris Saint-Germain, was made available to former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke.
A view of a villa in Porto Cervo which was seized by the Italian Police. Italian police claim the luxury property belonging to Nasser al-Khelaifi, who is also president of Paris Saint-Germain, was made available to former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke.
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A view of a villa in Porto Cervo which was seized by the Italian Police. Italian police claim the luxury property belonging to Nasser al-Khelaifi, who is also president of Paris Saint-Germain, was made available to former FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke.

PSG chairman and beIN Media chief Nasser al-Khelaifi faced new accusations Friday as Italian police seized a villa in Sardinia used as "a means of corruption" in the World Cup media rights scandal.

Italian police, who searched the luxury villa in Porto Cervo, said Khelaifi had put the property at the disposal of disgraced ex-FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke.

Khelaifi and Valcke, who was Sepp Blatter's right-hand man at FIFA until both were drummed out of world football's governing body, were placed under investigation by Swiss prosecutors on Thursday over the sale of World Cup media rights.

A close aide of Khelaifi told AFP the Qatari had no reason to corrupt anyone "when he had no competitor" in the bidding for the Middle East and North African rights for future World Cups, which the aide claimed was the sole focus of the Swiss investigation.

Khelaifi's lawyer, Francis Szpiner, declined to comment when contacted by AFP.

Khelaifi has close links to Qatar's ruling family and heads the Gulf state's beIN media group, which has a portfolio of channels in countries including France, Turkey and Australia.

FIFA said Friday it was also investigating Khelaifi over the media rights issue. A FIFA spokesman said its Ethics Commission "opened a preliminary investigation into Nasser al-Khelaifi on Thursday evening".

READ: Swiss probe PSG’s Al-Khelaifi and ex-FIFA executive over corruption

Italian police said they had searched and seized the "Villa Bianca" set in lush grounds on the Mediterranean island in a raid conducted in the presence of a "representative of the Swiss government".

Several people "linked to various titles to the company that owns the villa" have been questioned, police added, without giving further details.

The villa, with an estimated value of seven million euros ($8.3 million), is owned by an international real estate agency.

Valcke's lawyer denied any wrongdoing, telling AFP his client, FIFA's secretary general from 2007 to January 2016, had paid rent for the property.

"There was a contract and Mr Valcke paid the rent," Stephane Ceccaldi said.

- Wide-ranging probe -

The Swiss attorney general's office said their probe into Valcke and Khelaifi focused on media rights for upcoming World Cups between 2018-30 and includes allegations of bribery, fraud, criminal mismanagement and forgery of a document.

The investigation comes in the wake of Valcke's appearance on Wednesday at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Lausanne to appeal his 10-year ban from all football-related activity.

Prosecutors have indicated that Khelaifi was under suspicion only for actions taken as the head of the beIN group.

The Qatar broadcaster has denied any wrongdoing while confirming French authorities had raided the company's Paris offices at the request of Swiss authorities.

Khelaifi oversaw Paris Saint-Germain's world record signing of Brazilian superstar Neymar in August .

The audacious 222 million euro transfer from Barcelona was widely seen as an example of gas-rich Qatar, which will host the 2022 World Cup, exercising its "soft power".

The club, which was bought by Qatar Sports Investments in 2011, is not implicated in the Swiss investigation.

The probe into Khelaifi adds to the controversy surrounding the Qatar World Cup.

Organisers on Friday hit back at suggestions the desert nation will be stripped of the tournament.

Nasser al-Khater, assistant secretary-general at Qatar's Supreme Committee for Delivery and Legacy, responded on Twitter after a noted critic claimed bookmakers had shortened odds on the World Cup being taken away from Qatar.

ALSO READ: PSG signing Neymar a PR coup for isolated Qatar

Earlier on Friday, Ghanem Nuseibeh had tweeted: "William Hill offering odds 25% chance FIFA 2022 will not be held in Qatar.

"In business terms, 25% is 'high risk'."

That prompted an uncharacteristic outburst from Khater, who wrote: "The odds were 6000 to 1 against us winning the bid in 2009. Guess what happened on Dec 2, 2010", referring to the date Qatar won the FIFA vote.

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