Panama Report: FIFA President Gianni Infantino strongly denies any wrong doing after being implicated
New
FIFA President Gianni Infantino has strongly denied any wrong doing
after he was implicated in the ongoing scandal involving the report
published by Panama Papers. Leaked documents shared with
the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists revealed that
Infantino, while he worked for UEFA signed a deal with one of the men
at the centre of the sport’s corruption scandal, Hugo Jinkis.
According
to the reports, ten years ago when Infantino was director of legal
services at UEFA, the organisation sold the rights for broadcasting its
club competitions including the Champions League in South America to an
Argentinian company called Cross Trading.
Cross
Trading immediately sold the rights on to broadcaster Teleamazonas for
about three or four times the amount paid, and Cross Trading is a
subsidiary of a company called Full Play.
Full
Play is owned by Jinkis, who along with his son Mariano, is under house
arrest in Argentina after he was indicted in the United States in May
last year as part of the corruption scandal which rocked FIFA, and which
the current FIFA board led by Infantino have promised to sanitize.
Hugo Jinkis and his son, Mariano, are fighting extradition from Argentina to the United States.
US
prosecutors alleged last year that, as the owners of Cross Trading,
Jinkis and his son paid millions of dollars in bribes to South American
football officials over several years in order to gain lucrative
television rights for regional football tournaments.
This
is a smack on Infantino's face due to the fact that UEFA has constantly
denied dealing with those implicated in the scandal.
Infantino, in a bid to ensure his integrity isn't smeared, posted this statement on FIFA's official website last night.
"I
am dismayed and will not accept that my integrity is being doubted by
certain areas of the media, especially given that UEFA has already
disclosed in detail all facts regarding these contracts.
From
the moment I was made aware of the latest media enquiries on the
matter, I immediately contacted UEFA to seek clarity. I did this because
I am no longer with UEFA, and it is they who exclusively possess all
contractual information relating to this query. In the meantime, UEFA
has announced that it has been conducting a review of its numerous
commercial contracts and has answered extensively all media questions
related to these specific contracts.
As I
previously stated, I never personally dealt with Cross Trading nor their
owners as the tender process was conducted by Team Marketing on behalf
of UEFA.
I would like to state for the record
that neither UEFA nor I have ever been contacted by any authorities in
relation to these particular contracts.
Moreover,
as media themselves report, there is no indication whatsoever for any
wrongdoings from neither UEFA nor myself in this matter."
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