PSG chief has athletics bid corruption probe dismissed
Nasser Al Khelaifi ( president PSG ) - Aleksander Ceferin - president UEFA (PHOTO/Reuters)
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France's
highest court has dropped proceedings against Paris Saint-Germain chief Nasser
Al-Khelaifi over alleged corruption in the bidding process for the 2017 and
2019 world athletics championships.
The Court of
Cassation's ruling, seen by AFP, ends an investigation that saw Al-Khelaifi
charged with corruption in May 23, 2019.
"I am
pleased with this decision which is in accordance with the law and I recall
that Nasser Al-Khelaifi has always contested having committed any offence in
this case," his lawyer Francis Szpiner told AFP.
Doha lost
out to London to stage the 2017 worlds but beat off opposition to host the 2019
event from Eugene in the United States and Barcelona.
French
prosecutors were looking specifically at two payments of $3.5 million in 2011
by Oryx Qatar Sports Investment, a company run by Nasser's brother Khalid
Al-Khelaifi, to a sports marketing firm run by Papa Massata Diack.
Diack's late
father Lamine Diack was president of the International Association of Athletics
Federations (IAAF), now World Athletics, from 1999 to 2015 and a member of the
International Olympic Committee.
As well as
his role as president of PSG, Al-Khelaifi is also the boss of Qatari television
channel BeIN Sports.
The Court of
Cassation's decision also ends the investigation of Yousif Al-Obaidli,
commercial director of the Al Jazeera television channel.
While none
of the accused were French and the companies involved, as the IAAF, were based
outside France, prosecutors argued they could investigate because of a meeting
at the Negresco Hotel in Nice, on French territory.
The court
decided there was no basis for the case to go forward.
In June last
year a Swiss federal court acquitted Al-Khelaifi on appeal of corruption in the
attribution of World Cup TV rights.
FIFA's
former secretary general Jerome Valcke was also acquitted of the same charges.
Al-Khelaifi
had been charged with inciting Valcke to commit "aggravated criminal
mismanagement".
Valcke, who
until 2015 was the right-hand man of now ousted FIFA president Sepp Blatter,
faced the bulk of the charges linked to two separate cases of television rights
corruption.
The
Frenchman stood accused of wanting to transfer the Middle East and North Africa
rights for screening the 2026 and 2030 World Cups to beIN Media, in exchange
for "unwarranted benefits" from Al-Khelaifi.


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