Fifa applies global bans over match-fixing
Players from Estonia and Tunisia and match officials from Lebanon and Armenia have been given worldwide bans in connection with attempts to manipulate games, soccer's world governing body Fifa said on Thursday.
Fifa said the bans had already been imposed atlocal level by the respective federations and would now apply globally.
They included two Armenian officials who werebanned by Uefa last week over an attempt to fix the result of a Europa League match in July.
Referee Andranik Arsenyan and assistant Hovhannes Avagyan, who officiated in the match between FC Inter Turku and Vikingur, were suspended for life.
In an earlier Armenian Football Federation hearing, they admitted having tried to manipulate the outcome of the second-leg fixture, which ended 1-0 in favour of Vikingur.
Lebanese referee Ali Sabbagh, jailed for six months in Singapore for accepting sexual favours to fix a game, was provisionally banned until the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) concludes its own investigation into the case, Fifa said.
He was withdrawn as referee only hours beforean AFC match between Singapore's Tampines Rovers and India's East Bengal on April 3.
Fifa also extended a life ban on Estonian playerElvis Liivamagi, imposed by his own federationon August 7 following investigations into domestic match-fixing.
The Tunisian case involved two players, Marouane Troudi and Mahmoud Dridi, as well as the official Amir Jaziri, who have been provisionally suspended until a case into domestic match manipulation has been concluded.
Fifa said the bans had already been imposed atlocal level by the respective federations and would now apply globally.
They included two Armenian officials who werebanned by Uefa last week over an attempt to fix the result of a Europa League match in July.
Referee Andranik Arsenyan and assistant Hovhannes Avagyan, who officiated in the match between FC Inter Turku and Vikingur, were suspended for life.
In an earlier Armenian Football Federation hearing, they admitted having tried to manipulate the outcome of the second-leg fixture, which ended 1-0 in favour of Vikingur.
Lebanese referee Ali Sabbagh, jailed for six months in Singapore for accepting sexual favours to fix a game, was provisionally banned until the Asian Football Confederation (AFC) concludes its own investigation into the case, Fifa said.
He was withdrawn as referee only hours beforean AFC match between Singapore's Tampines Rovers and India's East Bengal on April 3.
Fifa also extended a life ban on Estonian playerElvis Liivamagi, imposed by his own federationon August 7 following investigations into domestic match-fixing.
The Tunisian case involved two players, Marouane Troudi and Mahmoud Dridi, as well as the official Amir Jaziri, who have been provisionally suspended until a case into domestic match manipulation has been concluded.
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