An anti-Mafia official at Milan’s city council called yesterday for the Chinese buyers of soccer club AC Milan to reveal their identities, saying town hall would notify anti-money laundering authorities if there was not full disclosure.

In August, former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi agreed to sell the Serie A club to China’s Sino-Europe Sports Investment Management Changxing, which is backed by Haixia Capital and entrepreneur Yonghong Li.

But the full make-up of the consortium was not disclosed and, according to a source, has yet to be finalised.

An Italy-based spokesman for Sino-Europe Sports was not immediately available for comment.

David Gentili, a politician from the centre-left Democratic Party who heads the city council’s anti-Mafia commission, told reporters on Wednesday that the council had a duty to ask about the identities of the club’s “effective owners”.

He said that if this was not disclosed, council authorities would notify the Bank of Italy’s unit responsible for fighting money-laundering.

The council owns AC Milan’s home stadium, San Siro, which is also used by cross-town rival Inter.

The two clubs pay the council around €14 million ($15 million) a year for the use of the stadium, Gentili said.

The Milan deal is due to be completed in early December, with the full list of investors expected to be released at the time of the closing.

Sino-Europe Sports is still finalising the consortium, a source familiar with the situation said this month.

Besides Haixia Capital and Yonghong Li, there will be two or three other investors, the source added.

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