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FIFA endorses app to report match-fixing approaches

Red Button app originated in a partnership between Finland's players association and government

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Hoofddorp (Netherlands), September 11

A smartphone app developed by the international soccer players' union allowing professional players to anonymously report match-fixing approaches was endorsed by the FIFA on Friday.

The "Red Button" whistleblower app ensures anonymity to protect players who otherwise may fear consequences to their career or personal safety, FIFPro said in a statement.

"With players facing disciplinary action for failing to report a match-fixing approach, there must be a way for them to do this without fear that they are putting themselves, their families and their careers in danger," said FIFPro legal director Roy Vermeer.

"The Red Button app provides this facility and will help players manage this considerable risk that, through no fault of their own, might confront them at any time."

Under the collaboration agreement, the FIFA will investigate confidential information submitted through the union-owned app, which is "built with technology that ensures no trace of a report is left on their smartphones", said the announcement.

The app, which is being distributed through national player associations, also gives players the option to submit contact information so investigators can contact them confidentially.

Soccer is the most-targeted sport by international organized crime, according to Europol — the European Union's agency for law enforcement cooperation.

FIFA already has confidential reporting platforms — such as the FIFA Integrity app — that players can still use.

Oliver Jaberg, one of FIFA's top integrity and anti-doping officers, said they "look forward to collaborating with FIFPro on this new initiative".     

The Red Button app originated in a partnership between Finland's players association and government.

Players across sports have a high-degree of trust in reporting systems managed by their union, according to a University of Liverpool Management School report.

On FIFPro's website, Samir Arab described how he rejected a 3,000 euro (USD 3,500) offer to fix a game when he played for Malta's under-21 national team in 2016.

He said he was too scared to report it to soccer authorities. Police eventually investigated and Arab co-operated, but he was still banned from soccer for two years.

"I lost two years of my career," Arab said in his endorsement of the union app.

"I lost two years of progress." AP

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