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About 200 European football matches are under investigation in a match-fixing inquiry, German prosecutors have said.
At least three of the games were in the Champions League and another 12 were in the Uefa Europa League, officials said.
Uefa representative Peter Limacher called it the biggest match-fixing scandal ever to hit Europe.
On Thursday police carried out about 50 raids in Germany, the UK, Switzerland and Austria, making 17 arrests and seizing cash and property.
Matches under investigation were played in Germany, Belgium, Switzerland, Croatia, Slovenia, Turkey, Hungary, Bosnia-Hercegovina and Austria.
Cash seized
Prosecutors believe a criminal gang has bribed players, coaches, referees and officials to fix games and then made money by betting on the results.
The investigation is being carried out by German authorities and supported by Uefa, the European football body.
Prosecutors said cash and property seized in Thursday’s raids was valued at more than 1m euros (£900,000).
All the matches under suspicion are believed to have taken place this year, although prosecutors did not specify if they were qualifying games or group-round matches.
Speaking at a press conference in Germany, Mr Limacher said the revelations represented “clearly” the worst ever match-fixing scandal in European football.
He said the arrests were proof that the detection system was working.
“We feel a certain satisfaction but on the other side we are deeply affected by the scope of game manipulations by international gangs,” he added.
A German police spokesman told the BBC that officers in the UK had been helping in the inquiry but that no British football matches were under suspicion.
UK police said they had carried out a search in the Greater London area following a request from German law enforcement officials.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/8370748.stm