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AFC general secretary Alex Soosay resigns amid corruption allegations

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia -- Asian Football Confederation (AFC) general secretary Alex Soosay has quit amid a probe into allegations that he ordered a cover-up during an audit of the organisation in 2012.

The AFC issued a statement on Wednesday to announce the resignation of, and to thank, Soosay for his 20-year career at the governing body. The statement did not give any reasons, however, and Soosay did not comment.

Malaysian newspaper the Malay Mail reported earlier this year that it had obtained a video from July 2012 which showed AFC financial director Bryan Kuan Wee Hong telling a FIFA investigator that Soosay had asked for any incriminating evidence potentially connecting him to wrongdoing under disgraced former AFC president Mohamed bin Hammam to be concealed.

In a statement last month announcing that Soosay had been suspended, the AFC said: "A video statement conducted as part of a FIFA investigation was passed to media recently, and the AFC has now been able to verify its authenticity."

Soosay, who became AFC general secretary in 2009, said last month there was nothing in the allegations and claimed it was a smear attempt.

The AFC said deputy general secretary Windsor John will be in charge of the secretariat until a replacement is appointed.

Bin Hammam resigned in 2011 while under investigation for conflicts of interest and financial mismanagement at the AFC, and was later expelled from football by FIFA.

In 2012, Pricewaterhouse Coopers conducted an internal audit of the running of the AFC under Bin Hammam and questioned the awarding of TV rights and millions of dollars of payments into AFC accounts "purportedly for the personal use of its president."

Allegations against Bin Hammam emerged during his campaign to unseat Sepp Blatter as FIFA president in 2011. The Qatari withdrew from the campaign amid allegations he attempted to buy votes and Blatter retained the presidency unopposed.

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