The president of the South American football federation
Conmebol was detained in Zurich earlier this month. Mr Napout, a Paraguayan, is accused of taking bribes worth
millions of dollars linked to the sale of marketing rights to South American
tournaments.
He resigned following his arrest and is currently banned
from football.
Swiss justice authorities also said Eduardo Li, a former
president of the Costa Rican federation who was arrested in Zurich in May, had
dropped his appeal against extradition to the US.
Mr Napout was arrested at the same time as fellow Fifa
vice-president Alfredo Hawit, the interim president for North, Central America
and Caribbean football.
All three men are among 16 current and former senior
football officials indicted by US authorities investigating corruption in the
organisation earlier this month.
The FBI investigation was initially sparked by the
controversial award of the 2022 World Cup to Qatar, as well as the bidding
process for the 2018 World Cup in Russia.
But the inquiry has since been widened to look at Fifa's
dealings over the past 20 years. The US says the corruption was planned in the
US and US banks were used to transfer money.
Fifa President Sepp Blatter has always denied any
wrongdoing, but in September he was made the subject of a parallel Swiss
criminal investigation.
Under the US investigation, former Honduras President Rafael
Callejas appeared in court in New York and pleaded not guilty to bribery
charges.
Mr Callejas, who led his country between 1990 and 1994, is a
current member of Fifa's television and marketing committee.
Meanwhile in Peru, authorities have opened an investigation
into the current head of the Peruvian Football Federation (FPF), Edwin Oviedo,
as well as 65 other people.
Prosecutors are examining the FPF's bank accounts and
balance sheets amid suspicion that sports activities were used to launder
money, AFP news agency reports.
And in Brazil, former stars including Rai and Paulo Cezar
Caju have called for the resignation of Brazilian Football Confederation
President Marco Polo Del Nero, who has been indicted in the US for
"racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering conspiracies".
"We need a more democratic institution in order to
rebuild Brazilian football," Rai told BBC Brasil.
Mr Del Nero is currently on a leave of absence.
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