Match-fixing trial opens against 10 in Finland

By Matti Huuhtanen

Associated Press

Published: Thursday, June 9 2011 7:55 a.m. MDT

Singaporean Wilson Maj Perumal sits in the Lapland district court in Rovaniemi, Finland, on Thursday June 9, 2011. Nine players from Zambia and Georgia and a Singaporean man accused of bribing them went on trial Thursday in a match-fixing investigation that has rocked the Finnish football league. The probe centers on...

Lehtikuva, Kaisa Siren, Associated Press

ROVANIEMI, Finland — Nine players from Zambia and Georgia and a Singaporean man accused of bribing them went on trial Thursday in a match-fixing investigation that has rocked the Finnish football league.

The probe centers on Wilson Raj Perumal, a Singaporean also suspected by world governing body FIFA of fixing international games involving African and Asian national teams.

Finnish prosecutors say Perumal offered the players bribes of €470,000 to fix matches in an international betting scam that targeted the local team in Rovaniemi, a northern city near the Arctic Circle.

Perumal, who was arrested in February, is also accused of attempting to bribe players at two other Finnish league clubs, entering Finland with a fake passport and trying to flee from officials guarding him.

He was guarded by two police officers as the charges were read in the Lapland District Court, where the trial is expected to continue for several weeks. Sporting a graying, ruffled beard, he remained silent, staring at the floor and fidgeting with a pen.

Perumal's defense lawyer Pertti Poyko said Perumal has confessed to many of the charges, including some of the bribery allegations, while denying others.

The players — seven Zambians and two Georgians — were charged with accepting bribes of between €11,000 and €50,000 each to affect the outcome of matches. In cases where the desired result was not achieved, the money was paid back to Perumal, according to the charges.

Prosecutors demanded a prison term of two years and four months for Perumal. They also asked for between 19 and 23 months for six Zambian players, and suspended sentences for another Zambian and two Georgians.

In addition, the Rovaniemen Palloseura football club, which fired the players after the investigation started, is demanding €213,000 in damages for loss of advertising revenue and salaries for new players signed to fill out the roster.

The Finnish league, which is far removed from the big money and public attention of the bigger leagues in Europe, has been overshadowed by match-fixing scandals since it kicked off in May.

Three-time champion Tampere was suspended from the league after team officials acknowledged accepting €300,000 from a Singaporean company but were unable to explain why they took the money.

On May 6, two Zambian brothers playing for AC Oulu were convicted of taking €50,000 in bribes to play "below their normal level" in a 5-0 loss last year.

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