Turkish clubs cleared in match-fixing scandal
Turkey's football federation has cleared all 16 Turkish teams, including Fenerbahce, of involvement in an alleged match-fixing scandal, but it also has banned two players for up to three years and imposed disciplinary measures on eight players or club officials, according to the federation's website on Monday.
''There is no reason for punishment since the elements of the alleged disciplinary violation have not materialized,'' the federation said in a statement late Sunday.
Fenerbahce was barred from this season's Champions League as a result of the investigation.
The announcement came a week after the federation said an independent football ethics committee looking into the match-fixing allegations concluded that there was no evidence that alleged attempts to fix games had altered the course of 22 matches tainted by the allegations.
It was not clear if the federation's decision would satisfy European soccer's governing body, UEFA, which had said it would intervene if the Turkish federation's disciplinary body fails to take any action before a June 1 deadline to register clubs for European competitions.
A total of 93 officials, players and coaches, including the president of defending champion Fenerbahce, are on trial, accused of helping fix matches last season. The federation's decision could affect the course of the trial, which was relying in part on the federation's guidance.
The Turkish federation only banned striker Ibrahim Akin of Istanbul Buyuksehir Belediyesi for three years for allegedly fixing the result of a game when his team lost to Fenerbahce 2-0 on May 1, 2011. It also banned Serdar Kulbilge of Genclerbirligi for two years for allegedly attempting to fix the result of a game that Fenerbahce won 4-2.
It said eight other people, including Fenerbahce officials Mehmet Sekip Mosturoglu, Ilhan Yuksel Eksioglu and Cemil Turhan, received a disciplinary measure called ''depravation of rights'' which amounts to barring a person from any administrative or sports activities, including entering the stadiums. That disciplinary measure, however, can be postponed.