A Swiss court rejected an appeal from an executive of world soccer body FIFA held in prison as part of a corruption probe to be freed on grounds of ill health, fearing he might abscond.

Lawyers for Venezuela’s Rafael Esquivel, 69, had asked the Federal Court’s appeals chamber to release him.

He has been in custody since a dawn raid in Zurich on May 27 nabbed him and six other soccer executives on US arrest warrants, throwing the governing body of global soccer into turmoil.

“The court held that there was a risk that the appellant would abscond if released. The arguments put forward in support of his release, such as his advanced age and poor state of health, were not regarded as sufficient to counter the risk of absconding,” the court said in a statement yesterday.

The court did not identify him by name but said he had headed Venezuela’s soccer association and was a member of the executive committee of the South American Football Confederation.

A law enforcement source confirmed it was Esquivel.

Esquivel, who the court said denies wrongdoing, is fighting efforts to extradite him to the United States.

US prosecutors are accusing 14 soccer officials and sports marketing executives of bribery, money laundering and wire fraud charges involving more than $150 million in payments.

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