Ye Zheyun
Ye Zheyun is a Chinese businessman who was accused of being involved in a Belgian football corruption and betting scandal that took place in 2005.[1] It was alleged that several teams and/or players received money from Ye to influence match results, so corrupt bookmakers could be certain of a gambling profit.
Ye Zheyun | |
---|---|
Born | |
Disappeared | November 2005 (age 40) Belgium |
Status | never apprehended, remains at large |
Nationality | Chinese |
Occupation | businessman |
Known for | for being involved in a Belgian football corruption and betting scandal in 2005. |
Background information
Teams mentioned in the scandal are Lierse, La Louvière, Sint-Truiden, Mons, Geel and also Germinal Beerschot. Ye always appeared at teams with financial problems, except for Beerschot, who had at that time a crucial match against AEC Mons who were on the verge of relegation. The insinuations about fixed results started after a few matches, on which were heavily betted, with strange events and/or results. Such as e.g. Lierse starting with a reserve team twice unexpectedly. Ye had also been the owner of Finnish team AC Allianssi, due to bankruptcy a now defunct club who also seemed to experience from some strange match events at the end of their existence. Police investigated the case, but found insufficient evidence.
Disappearance
Ye mostly worked together with Pietro Allatta and Olivier Suray. Police arrested both, but Allatta and Suray were released after interrogation. In March 2006, the Belgian Justice Department ordered an international arrest warrant against Ye. It is unknown where he currently remains. His lawyer told French sports paper L'Équipe that Ye denied all accusations and that he was residing somewhere in China.[2][3]
References
- "Belgian soccer match-fixing scandal widens". Retrieved 2017-09-15.
- "Soccer: Corruption without borders in Belgian scandal's China link". The New York Times. 2006-03-03. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-09-15.
- Werdigier, Julia; Newcastle, ROB HUGHES; Julia Werdigier reported from; London, Rob Hughes from; Bochum; Germany. (2009-12-06). "Police Look at Links to Soccer Betting in Murders in England". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2017-09-15.