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Brazil football chief takes leave amid corruption charges

Xinhua, December 4, 2015 Adjust font size:

The president of Brazil's football federation (CBF) Marco Polo Del Nero began a leave of absence on Thursday as he prepares to defend himself against corruption charges.

   The 74-year-old will be replaced on an interim basis by Marcus Antonio Vicente, the CBF said in a statement. 

   Del Nero was among 16 people charged on Thursday as US investigators stepped up their probe into graft in football. 

   Former CBF president Ricardo Teixeira and a host of other top Latin American officials were also among those indicted, according to a US justice department statement.

   Investigators have accused the defendants of participating in bribery and kickback schemes for deals involving media and marketing rights.

   Both Del Nero and Teixeira, who was once the son-in-law of longtime FIFA president Joao Havelange, are former executive committee members of world football governing body FIFA.

   Swiss prosecutors previously accused Teixeira and Havelange of accepting bribes to award World Cup marketing contracts.

   Others named in the US justice department indictment were Ariel Alvarado (Panama), Rafael Callejas (Honduras), Brayan Jimenez (Guatemala), Rafael Salguero (Guatemala), Hector Trujillo (Guatemala), Reynaldo Vasquez (El Salvador), Juan Angel Napout (Paraguay), Manuel Burga (Peru), Carlos Chavez (Bolivia), Luis Chiriboga (Ecuador), Eduardo Deluca (Argentina), Jose Luis Meiszner (Argentina) and Romer Osuna (Bolivia).

   Earlier, Swiss police arrested Hawitt, the president of South American football confederation (Conmebol), and Napout, the president of the North America, Central America and Caribbean confederation (Concacaf), at the Baur au Lac Hotel in Zurich.

   Both were charged with accepting millions of dollars in bribes and are awaiting extraditition to the US. 

   The hotel was also the scene of a police raid in May that resulted in the arrest of seven FIFA officials. 

   US attorney general Loretta Lynch said in the indictment that the scale of betrayal shown by the defendants was "outrageous" and "unconscionable."

   "The message from this announcement should be clear to every culpable individual who remains in the shadows, hoping to evade our investigation: you will not wait us out; you will not escape our focus," Lynch said.

   The ongoing corruption allegations have shaken FIFA - a multibillion-dollar entity that has faced accusations of bribery for decades - to its core.

   In June, FIFA president Sepp Blatter announced he would resign, just days after he was reelected to a fifth term. 

   Blatter has since been suspended by an internal ethics committee, as has FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke and European football chief Michel Platini. All have denied any wrongdoing.  Endi