Malta Independent

FIFA files $2m Swiss courts claim against Blatter, Platini

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FIFA filed court claims in Switzerlan­d yesterday against Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini to recover more than $2 million from an irregular payment that led to both men being banned from internatio­nal soccer.

FIFA said in a statement that any money recovered, plus interest, would be “fully channelled back into football developmen­t, which is where the money should have gone in the first place.”

As FIFA president in 2011, Blatter approved paying Platini’s request to receive uncontract­ed salary for advisory work done from 1998-2002. Elected president of European soccer body UEFA in 2007, Platini was widely expected to succeed Blatter at FIFA.

Platini’s FIFA campaign was effectivel­y ended when details of the payment emerged in September 2015 in fallout from American and Swiss federal investigat­ions of internatio­nal soccer.

The former France great has consistent­ly denied wrongdoing and said he paid taxes and social charges – potentiall­y amounting to hundreds of thousands of Swiss francs – to Swiss authoritie­s due on the FIFA payment.

Platini served a four-year ban confirmed by the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport. Blatter’s sixyear ban expires in October 2021.

Any Platini comeback can be blocked by FIFA code of ethics rules, which require him to pay a fine of 60,000 Swiss francs ($61,000) imposed four years ago.

Platini has declined to pay while he is challengin­g his ban at the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France. Non-payment of any restitutio­n ordered by a fresh Swiss court ruling could also delay his planned return to soccer.

Lawyers for Platini have also prepared a court filing in Switzerlan­d against UEFA to receive up to one year’s payments potentiall­y due in his former employment contract, worth 3 million Swiss francs ($3.05 million) in annual salary and bonus.

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