Audio By Carbonatix
Former Fifa president Sepp Blatter and French football legend Michel Platini are back in court in Switzerland to face accusations of fraud.
In 2022, the pair were acquitted in a trial over a payment of 2m Swiss francs (£1.6m) made to Platini and authorised by Blatter in 2011.
Both men denied wrongdoing and said the transfer was belated payment for Fifa advisory work by Platini, who formerly led European football's governing body Uefa.
But the Swiss federal prosecutor appealed against the decision. The new trial is expected to last until Thursday, with a verdict due on 25 March.
The pair appeared before an appeals court in Muttenz, near Basel, on Monday. Blatter, 88, reaffirmed that he was innocent.
"When you talk about falsehoods, lies and deception, that's not me. That didn't exist in my whole life," he told the court.
A lawyer for Platini, 69, said the lower court that acquitted the pair in 2022 had been "right to find that the disputed payment of 2m francs was lawful".
Platini had an illustrious playing career and is a three-time winner of the Ballon d'Or - Europe's highest individual football award.
He captained France to victory at the 1984 European Championship and won the 1985 European Cup with Juventus. He went on to coach the French national team and became Uefa president in 2007.
In 2015, prosecutors accused the pair of deceiving Fifa about payments made to Platini.
In his testimony at the first trial, Blatter said that he had asked Platini to work as his adviser in 1998. He added that at the time, Fifa could not afford the 1m Swiss francs annual fee requested by Platini.
They instead settled on partial payment, with the outstanding balance to be paid at a later date. Platini said during the trial: "I trusted the president, and knew he would pay me one day."
He stopped working for Fifa in 2002 but initially did not pursue the payment as he told the court he had not needed the money at the time, and - according to Blatter - Fifa was "broke". In January 2011, however, Platini felt he was in a position to send an invoice and the money was paid after approval by Blatter.
Following an investigation launched in 2015, Swiss prosecutors accused Blatter and Platini of forgery and fraud.
Also in 2015, Fifa suspended both men from football for ethics breaches - originally for eight years, although their exclusions were later reduced.
In 2022, Switzerland's federal criminal court in Bellinzona cleared the two after accepting their account of a "gentlemen's agreement" for the payment.
Swiss businessman and sports administrator Blatter joined Fifa in 1975, became general secretary in 1981 and then president of world football's governing body in 1998.
He remained in the role for 17 years until resigning amid corruption investigations. Platini later withdrew his own candidacy for president.
Latest Stories
-
Public problems, private solutions; our national tragedy
6 minutes -
James Bks unveils ‘Milli Vanity’ video starring Fab Morvan
8 minutes -
IG Corporate Football League: GCAA and GAFOSC dominate Group A
11 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover declines 8.49% to GH¢2.08bn
14 minutes -
Queen Asabia welcomes another Heritage Month
16 minutes -
Twitter comment calling me beautiful but brainless broke me – S3fa
20 minutes -
Richmond Adu-Poku: Do Ghanaian artistes have a global strategy?
20 minutes -
‘I Told You So’ play: Free opening night for people aged 60 and above
35 minutes -
Blue Gold aligns Ghana litigation strategy around ongoing international arbitration
42 minutes -
Health crisis goes beyond ‘no-bed syndrome’; Ghana’s system is fundamentally broken — Dr Kwame Sarpong
46 minutes -
Three students to be arraigned over assault on Obrachire SHS pupil — Police
50 minutes -
Concerned Ahanta West NDC executives petition President Mahama for MCE’s removal
52 minutes -
Ghana’s emergency healthcare system failing patients — Former GMA Vice President warns of deadly structural gaps
55 minutes -
UDS political science department holds international trade policy contest
58 minutes -
MUSIGA pays condolence visit to family of late Ebo Taylor
1 hour
