NINE ITALIANS ARRESTED IN FOOTBALL PROBE (Update)
27 November 2009
Arrests in Italy and a FIFA crisis meeting in
the fight against corruption
Reports over the weekend that a massive police action is
in progress across Europe in an attempt to stamp out
football cheating and corruption (see previous InfoPowa
report) have been followed by news of nine more arrests
in Italy and a crisis meeting called by FIFA.
Police in Rome announced Monday the arrest of nine
people accused of illegal betting in Italian football.
Amongst those arrested was the president of third
division team Potenza, Giuseppe Postiglione and Pro
Vastese sports director Luca Evangelista.
They
are accused of being involved in organised crime and of
sporting fraud relating to a number of bets placed on
matches in the second and third divisions from 2007 to
2009.
One match under investigation is the Serie
B encounter between Ravenna and Lecce on April 26, 2008,
won 3-1 by the away side, on which Postiglione
alledgedly placed a bet that won him Euro 86 000.
Giovanni Colangelo, the public prosecutor in
Potenza, claimed match-fixing had been taking place.
This is not the first Italian scandal of this
nature. In 2006 the Calciopoli scandal involved
high-profile Serie A teams and resulted in Juventus
being relegated to Serie B and stripped of their last
two league titles. AC Milan, Lazio, Fiorentina and
Reggina were also punished for their roles in alleged
match-fixing.
Following the weekend disclosures,
FIFA has called an emergency meeting in December to
discuss questionable refereeing and obviating corruption
in 'the beautiful game' reports Bloomberg business news.
President Sepp Blatter called the meeting in
response to refereeing that allowed a handball that
helped send France to the World Cup last week and the
arrest of suspects in Europe’s largest match-fixing
investigation. There were also riots before and after a
qualifying game between Algeria and Egypt.
“Due
to recent events in the world of football, namely
incidents at the playoffs for the 2010 FIFA World Cup
South Africa, match control (refereeing) and
irregularities in the football betting market, the FIFA
president has called an extraordinary meeting of the
executive committee,” FIFA said in a statement Monday.
Bloomberg reports that the police action in
Europe follows raids in the U.K., Switzerland and
Germany. Police said betting companies may have been
defrauded out of as much as Euro 10 million euros in
cheating and corruption scams.
“But this is just
the tip of the iceberg,” investigating German prosecutor
Andreas Bachmann said.
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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