Croatia charges Liverpool's Lovren with false testimony

Soccer Football - World Cup - The Croatia team return from the World Cup in Russia - Zagreb, Croatia - July 16, 2018   Croatia's Dejan Lovren during celebrations   REUTERS/Antonio Bronic
Soccer Football - World Cup - The Croatia team return from the World Cup in Russia - Zagreb, Croatia - July 16, 2018 Croatia's Dejan Lovren during celebrations REUTERS/Antonio Bronic

Thomson Reuters

ZAGREB (Reuters) - The Croatian state attorney has charged Croatia international and Liverpool defender Dejan Lovren with giving false testimony in a trial against officials of his former club, the attorney's office in the eastern city of Osijek said on Wednesday.

As is a usual practice in Croatia, the statement did not name Lovren but said it charged a 29-year old Croatian citizen,

citing details from his testimony given a year ago.

Croatian media, including the state television website, reported that Lovren was charged. No one was available at Liverpool to comment on the case to Reuters on Lovren's behalf.

In March this year, the state attorney also charged another Croatia international, Real Madrids midfielder Luka Modric, for false testimony in the same case.

Lovren testified at the trial of a tax official and three former senior officials from the soccer club Dinamo Zagreb, including its former chief executive Zdravko Mamic, about the dates of signing the annexes to his professional contracts which regulated transfer fees.

The Dinamo officials were charged with avoiding paying 12.2 million kuna ($1.92 million) in taxes and diverting 116 million kuna from the soccer club.. All of them denied any wrongdoing.

Lovren moved to Lyon from Dinamo Zagreb in 2010 and then joined Southampton in 2013 and Liverpool a year later. He and Modric both played in the Croatia team that was defeated 4-2 by France in the 2018 World Cup final.

A conviction for false testimony brings a jail term of between six months and five years.

Former Dinamo boss Zdravko Mamic fled to neighboring Bosnia earlier this year briefly before being sentenced to prison in Croatia.

(Reporting by Igor Ilic; Editing by Angus MacSwan)

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