Last updated on .From the section Football

Fifa is set to appoint top human rights lawyer Luis Moreno Ocampo as the first head of the new ethics committee's investigations arm.

Ocampo, 66, has experience of leading war crimes investigations at the International Criminal Court.

The Argentine is expected to be confirmed next month, and will investigate allegations of corruption or ethics rules breaches.

Ocampo's chamber will bring charges, while a separate arm will judge cases.

Analysis David Bond BBC sports editor "[This is] an important step on Blatter's road map to reform. But the sport's ruling body still has a very long way to travel." Read David Bond's blog on Fifa's ethics drive here

In March, football's governing body announced a wide-ranging overhaul of its governance, in light of a series of corruption allegations that have rocked the organisation over the last 18 months, concerning both World Cup bidding and the presidential election.

Fifa's single-chamber ethics committee failed to gather enough evidence to prosecute allegations of vote-rigging during the 2018 and 2022 World Cup bidding contests.

A report by Fifa's anti-corruption adviser, Swiss professor Mark Pieth, called Fifa's past investigation of corruption allegations "unsatisfactory", external-link with sanctions imposed both "insufficient and clearly unconvincing."

A double ethics chamber, with one arm overseen by Ocampo, is an attempt to improve the efficiency and reputation of Fifa in this area.

Veteran lawyer Ocampo was appointed as the first chief prosecutor of the ICC in 2003, but is stepping down from his position at The Hague in June.