By IANS
London : The British government will not intervene in the ownership of football clubs despite fresh concerns over Manchester City owner Thaksin Shinawatra.
A leading human rights group claims Shinawatra should not have passed the Premier League's "fit and proper person" test.
British sports minister Gerry Sutcliffe said the test could be improved.
But he told BBC Radio: "It has to be the football authorities that decide because they set the rules."
Sutcliffe recommended the introduction of a test that would span the entire game.
"There are three tests: one for the Football Association (FA), one for the Premier League (EPL) and one for the Football League," he said.
"What they could do is bring them together, standardise it. The other thing is to look at what else can be done in terms of the transparency of ownership of clubs, looking at what the director's duties can be."
Leading human rights organisations Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International expressed grave concerns about Shinawatra.
The former Thai prime minister faces a string of corruption charges in his home country and was described as "a human rights abuser of the worst kind".
However, the Premier League says its rules on ownership "go above and beyond any requirement by company law and are some of the sternest in any UK industry".
City have stood firmly by Shinawatra, who completed a 81.6-million pound takeover of the club in July.
"This is just another opportunistic move by a human rights group as there is no new evidence against Shinawatra," said City spokesman Paul Tyrrell said.
"It seems to have been overlooked that Shinawatra was ousted by a coup d'etat, having twice been elected prime minister of Thailand, one of the world's leading democracies.
"These allegations have only begun to emerge since the military government took power."
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