ZURICH. — FIFA lifted a new corner of its veil of secrecy yesterday by revealing that German football great Franz Beckenbauer and the current most senior UEFA official Angel Maria Villar Llona have been investigated.

It said inquiries for alleged misconduct by the two were now in the hands of the FIFA ethics committee’s main court for a decision. The ethics committee did not say why the two had been investigated.

But Beckenbauer and Villar Llona were on the FIFA executive committee when Russia and Qatar were awarded the 2018 and 2022 World Cups.

Beckenbauer was briefly suspended by FIFA last year for refusing to co-operate with a corruption inquiry into World Cup votes by former US federal prosecutor Michael Garcia.

Beckenbauer (70) and one of only two people to have won the World Cup as a player and coach, led Germany’s successful bid for the 2006 World Cup. This week he denied a report that a 6,7 million fund was used to buy votes.

Villar Llona has been head of the Spanish football federation for 27 years and a FIFA executive member since 1998. He is also currently the most senior official in the European body UEFA after the 90-day suspension of its president Michel Platini.

The world body’s executive decided on Tuesday to ease restrictions on details that ethics investigators could make public.

The committee released a long list of names under investigation, including for the first time confirming that suspended president Sepp Blatter and Platini face formal proceedings.

“The investigatory chamber will do everything in its power to ensure that a decision” on Blatter and Platini can be made before the end of their current 90 day suspensions.

Both have been banned over a two million dollar payment made by FIFA to Platini in 2011. The suspension threatens to derail the Frenchman’s bid to take over from Blatter when an election is held in February.

The committee also confirmed that suspended FIFA secretary general Jerome Valcke is being probed under “suspicion of misuse of expenses and other infringements of FIFA’s rules and regulations.” —AFP.

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