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Sports International

UEFA names 5 clubs suspected of match-fixing; Honved suspected of manipulating Fener match

Five clubs in Albania, Latvia, Slovenia and Hungary are suspected in European soccer’s biggest match-fixing investigation, UEFA said in Nyon, Switzerland, on Wednesday.

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The European soccer body identified the clubs as KF Tirana, FC Dinaburg, KS Vilaznia, NK IB Llubljana and Honved and said they allegedly fixed seven qualifying round games in the Champions League and Europa League between July 16 and Aug. 6.

UEFA general secretary Gianni Infantino described match-fixing as a “cancer we need to eradicate.” He said the seven matches were among 40 in continental club competitions previously identified as being under suspicion, including the Fenerbahçe-Budapest Honved Europa League qualifier in the summer.

Fenerbahçe won third qualifying round first-leg game 5-1 in Istanbul on July 30. But the important thing is that UEFA underlined that it is the Hungarian side that is suspected of match-fixing, not Fenerbahçe.

Infantino said UEFA is also investigating three referees and one official connected to UEFA. No member of UEFA’s administrative staff is suspected, he said.

“We don’t know if this is the end of the story,” Infantino said.

UEFA is cooperating with prosecutors in Bochum, Germany, who are leading a criminal probe into about 200 suspect matches in nine domestic leagues.

German-based betting syndicates are suspected of bribing players, coaches, referees and other officials to fix games and the suspected leaders are believed to have made at least 10 million euros ($15 million).

Police arrested 15 people in Germany last week, including Ante Sapina, a Croatian national who was convicted in Germany’s match-fixing scandal in 2005 that involved referee Robert Hoyzer.

UEFA officials met with national association leaders from the nine countries -- Austria, Belgium, Bosnia, Croatia, Germany, Hungary, Slovenia, Switzerland and Turkey -- to share information about the investigation on Wednesday.

“At the start people were certainly shocked about the magnitude (of the scandal),” Infantino said after the three-hour summit at UEFA headquarters. “At the end of the meeting there was much more reassurance because we are working together.”

UEFA and its nine national members issued a joint statement promising strong action against any player, referee or club official implicated.

“He will be out of soccer, this is very, very clear,” Infantino said.

UEFA acknowledged that its investigative powers could not tackle organized crime.

It said soccer authorities would work with state justice departments to share information and file criminal complaints.

“We want all our associations, all 53, to be at the same level when it comes to fighting this cancer we need to eradicate,” Infantino said.

26 November 2009, Thursday

TODAY'S ZAMAN WITH WIRES  İSTANBUL

   

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