Ivan Vella has been named by FIFA on a three-man panel to monitor the Greek Football Federation (EPO) for at least a year after it holds its elections.

The Greek federation will be electing a new president and executive board next month and FIFA said that it will continue to monitor closely the body’s activities for the next 12 months to make sure no regulations are breached.

FIFA intervened in the trouble-hit EPO last October following months of turmoil on and off the pitch and has been effectively running it since then through a so-called normalisation committee.

The intervention will end with the EPO elections on Aug. 18, but a new monitoring committee will be established “to ensure oversight of the operations and processes... for at least 12 months,” FIFA said in a statement.

The committee will be formed by Vella, who has a good knowledge of the football situation in Greece as a UEFA Venue Director, Eduardo Dervishio, the Director of International Relations and Head of Club Licensing of the Spanish FA, and Herbert Hubel, member of the UEFA Legal Committee, who will act as a chairman.

FIFA said the committee would monitor the EPO’s overall situation including budgeting and finance and would report to both FIFA and UEFA every two months.

Greece’s problems began in March last year when the sports ministry cancelled the Greek Cup final following crowd violence at a semi-final tie.

In response, FIFA and European soccer body UEFA, who demand autonomy for their member federations, threatened to suspend Greece due to government interference in EPO affairs.

Eventually, the sports ministry allowed the match to go ahead, but it was played behind closed doors.

The start of last season then had to be postponed due to a long-running dispute over the selection of referees between Greece’s top clubs, the EPO and the government.

FIFA intervened in October, although more trouble arose with incidents involving members of the refereeing committee the following month.

Committee member Giorgos Tsachilidis was threatened by two men on his doorstep, and a week later Greece suspended all national league and cup competitions after an alleged arson attack at the home of the committee’s head, Giorgos Bikas.

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