
-
Liverpool boss Slot plays down 'best team' tag ahead of PSG showdown
-
Arab leaders endorse plan to rebuild Gaza under Palestinian Authority
-
Late goals put Villa in command of Champions League tie against Club Brugge
-
Car bomb attack in northwest Pakistan kills 12, wounds dozens
-
'We will endure': Mexican truckers stoic in face of Trump tariffs
-
Germany's Merz vows billions for defence, economy
-
Angry Gambhir hits out at critics of India's one-venue advantage
-
Trade war brings fear, uncertainty to Canadian border city
-
Syria interim president seeks pressure on Israel to withdraw from south
-
Competition drives down Nigeria petrol prices
-
'Stranded' NASA astronaut backs Musk in rescue row
-
How will Mexico respond to Trump's tariffs?
-
Tesla shares fall on weak China auto sales
-
US Supreme Court looks set to shoot down Mexico suit against gunmakers
-
Double car bomb attack kills 10 at Pakistan military compound
-
Putin hails Myanmar ties as junta chief visits Moscow
-
UN human rights experts criticise 'unneccessary' and 'unlawful' Olympic security
-
'Easy' route impossible in Champions League: Barca's Flick
-
Smith says 'positives' for Australia despite Champions Trophy exit
-
Mavs' Irving ruled out for season with ACL injury - reports
-
Abbas says PA ready to run Gaza as Arab leaders discuss reconstruction
-
China, Canada retaliate against Trump's 'dumb' tariff war
-
EU chief unveils 800-billion-euro plan to 'rearm' Europe
-
Swiss prosecutors seek suspended sentences for Blatter and Platini
-
Chaos as Serbia opposition set off flares in parliament to back protests
-
Seize or freeze? Friction in Europe over Russian assets for Ukraine
-
Stock markets, oil slide on trade war fears as US tariffs bite
-
China, Canada retaliate in 'dumb' Trump tariff war
-
Vance denies criticizing British, French armies
-
Tunisia puts opposition figures on mass trial decried as 'absurdity'
-
Zelensky appeals to Trump after aid halt
-
Kohli leads India to Champions Trophy final with victory over Australia
-
South Africa preparing for knock-out game as any other, says Bavuma
-
Dior's Chiuri creates elemental show for what could be her last
-
Trump to tout new 'American dream' to Congress despite Ukraine, tariff tensions
-
'No holding back', say Bayern before Leverkusen showdown
-
Liverpool boss Slot accused of foul-mouthed rant at ref
-
Eurovision chiefs promise 2025 show 'all about surprises'
-
Fears grow that last boat in Vendee Globe will miss cut-off
-
Peru's 'first poor president' on trial for rebellion
-
Wales wing Adams ruled out of Scotland Six Nations clash
-
Eurovision organisers say 2025 show 'all about surprises'
-
Luis Enrique says Slot has created 'almost perfect' Liverpool
-
Prada shines despite luxury crisis, Versace rumours swirl
-
Vance denies having criticized French, British armies
-
Yokohama beat toothless Shanghai Port in Champions League last 16
-
China, Canada retaliate to Trump tariff war
-
Milan mayor aiming to sell San Siro to Inter and AC Milan by the summer
-
World's biggest iceberg runs aground, sparing wildlife haven island
-
Chameleon phones and smart contact lenses: the gadgets of MWC 2025

Swiss prosecutors seek suspended sentences for Blatter and Platini
The Swiss public prosecutor on Tuesday requested suspended sentences of 20 months for both Sepp Blatter and Michel Platini in an appeal against their 2022 acquittal in a corruption case.
An Extraordinary Appeal Court sitting in Muttenz near Basel, will hand down its decision on March 25 in a long-running legal saga which shattered the careers of Blatter, the former president of world football's governing body FIFA, and Platini, ex-head of European body UEFA.
Prosecutor Thomas Hildbrand opted not to call for prison sentences for the 88-year-old Swiss and 69-year-old Frenchman.
The case began in 2015 when Blatter quit as head of FIFA in a corruption crisis. It stems from a delayed payment of two million Swiss francs (1.8 million euros) FIFA paid Platini in 2011 for consultancy services.
The pair were acquitted by the Swiss Federal Court in June 2022 of charges that included "disloyal management", "breach of trust" and "forgery of securities".
The court concluded that fraud was "not established with a likelihood bordering on certainty", and therefore applied the general principle of criminal law according to which "the doubt must benefit the accused".
The Swiss Attorney General's office appealed.
In his three-and-a-half-hour argument on Tuesday, Hildbrand set out to dispel the defendants' assertion that they had an "oral contract" to pay Platini in 2011 for work as a consultant between 1998 and 2002.
In 2011, Platini opted not to run against Blatter, who was then reelected as FIFA president.
Blatter and Platini had signed a written agreement in August 1999, before the Frenchman became UEFA president, providing for an annual payment by FIFA of 300,000 Swiss francs for consultancy work.
At the beginning of 2011, Platini presented an invoice for 2 million Swiss francs. Blatter approved it and presented it to FIFA as a late salary balance.
The defendants say they had agreed a yearly sum of one million Swiss francs but that this was too much for FIFA finances at the time.
Hildbrand said the argument was implausible. Even if FIFA had transferred one million Swiss francs to Platini in 1999, it would still have had "more than 21 million francs in cash", and its reserves had reached 328 million in 2002.
To agree such a sum without a written record, without witnesses and without ever making provision for it in the accounts was, he said, "contrary to commercial practise" as well as to FIFA's norms.
The appeal trial, which began on Monday, is due to continue until Thursday at the latest, with closing arguments from the defence.
Although FIFA, the civil party, has joined the public prosecutor's appeal, it is not represented in Muttenz.
P.Martin--AMWN