The ban remains! Chelsea lose appeal against FIFA on impossed transfer ban

The Blues of Stamford has lost an appeal they lodged against FIFA which is barring them from carrying out any player transfers for the next two seasons.

It spells very bad news for Chelsea who is at the risk losing one of they reliable strikers, Hazard who is being hunted by Real Madrid although a deal s yet to be stricken.

The only change to the ban, until the end of January 2020, is that the Blues can sign under-16 players from the UK during the suspension period.

Fifa took action against Chelsea after an investigation into their signing of foreign under-18 players. The club can now appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport.

“The Fifa appeal committee has decided to partially uphold the appeal lodged by Chelsea,” Fifa said in a statement.

“This ban applied to the club as a whole with the exception of the women’s and futsal teams and did not prevent the release of players.”

Fifa said it found breaches in 29 cases out of the 92 investigated. Chelsea’s fine of £460,000 by world football’s governing body also remains.

The Football Association (FA) was also fined £390,000 by Fifa when it issued the ban and English football’s governing body was told that it must “address the situation” regarding the international transfer and registration of minors.

Based on documents from Football Leaks, French website Mediapart claimed in November that 19 Chelsea signings had been looked at during a three-year investigation.

Mediapart alleged that 14 of those signings were under the age of 18 with the first case being reported in September 2017 that Chelsea was being investigated.

Burkina Faso international Bertrand Traore who now plays for Ligue 1 club Lyon signed his first professional contract at Chelsea in 2013 at the age of 18 but was not registered until January 2014.

Mediapart claimed Fifa found evidence that Chelsea had misled them over the dates, while Traore was found to have made 25 appearances for the Blues (under-16, under-18 and first team) despite not being registered by the FA.

Chelsea admitted they paid his mother £155,000, as well as a further £13,000 to the club she chaired AJE Bobo-Dioulasso in April 2011 to allow them first refusal over his signature.

That deal, it is alleged, was for four and a half years, despite the limit for under-18s being three years. In addition, it is also claimed Chelsea paid for Traore to attend the £20,000-a-year Whitgift School in Surrey.

Real Madrid and Atletico Madrid both received bans for breaching rules over the signing of minors in early 2016, while fellow Spanish club Barcelona were given a 14-month ban after breaking rules for signing international under-18s in 2014.

However, a Barcelona appeal saw their punishment pushed back a year, allowing the club to sign Luis Suarez, Ivan Rakitic, Jeremy Mathieu, Claudio Bravo and Marc-Andre Stegen.

Fifa bans the transfer of under-18s to different countries unless they meet strict criteria. It brought in the rules to help protect children from exploitation and trafficking.

Under-18s can only be transferred abroad if: The player’s parents move to the country in which the new club is located for non-footballing reasons.

Both clubs are in the European Union or European Economic Area and the player is aged between 16 and 18.

Even then, the buying club must meet more criteria relating to education, training, living conditions and support and also if they live within 100km of the club.

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