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June 27, 2007 Wednesday Jamadi-us-Sani 11, 1428






Referees, officials on trial for match-fixing


HANOI, June 26: Nine Vietnamese football referees and officials went on trial in the football-obsessed nation on Tuesday accused of taking and giving bribes to fix matches, a court official said.

The defendants in the Hanoi people’s court trial, which is scheduled to last two days, include seven referees, the former deputy coach of a local club and a former director of the southern Can Tho province sports department.

“The nine defendants will be prosecuted for taking and giving bribes, or for acting as middlemen between teams in several negative incidents in V-League competitions in recent years,” a court official earlier said.

According to the prosecutors’ indictment, “the referees abused their tasks ... to have unjustifiable relations with football teams, accepting to help some teams, then receiving their bribes.”

The referees, including FIFA-ranked Truong The Toan and Le Van Tu, were accused of accepting hundreds of millions of dong (tens of thousands of dollars) in the 2004-05 V-League seasons to be less tough on Dong A and Can Tho clubs.

The defendants' behaviour “had undermined the prestige and badly influenced the rules of honesty, objectiveness and obedience to the law (that) referees had to follow when running matches,” said the indictment.

If found guilty, the referees and officials face a maximum penalty of 15 years in jail.

The domestic V-League has been marred by allegations of corruption and match-fixing among players and referees since its debut 2000-01 season.—AFP






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