Sheikh Salman bin Ebrahim Al-Khalifa is the front-runner to replace disgraced Sepp Blatter as president of world football's governing body in Friday's vote in Zurich.
The 50-year-old is a senior member of the Bahrain royal family and has substantial support amongst football's powermongers.
But human rights groups have accused him of being involved in the arrest and torture of footballers involved in the 2011 civil protests when he was head of the Bahrain Football Association.
But ex-Bahrain international Hakeem Al Oraibi claims Sheikh Salman headed a committee which persecuted him and his team-mates, amongst others, for their part in the 2011 protests and must have known that they were tortured.
The central defender, who now plays for Australian second-division side Green Gully SC in Melbourne, described what happened after his arrest.
"They spent three hours hitting me hard on my legs, while saying: 'we will break your bones, we will destroy your future, you will never play football again with these legs'," he told WDR programme Sport Inside.
He says he was accused of attacking a police station at a time when he was playing in a televised match.
He insists Sheikh Salman knew about the beatings both he and his team-mates suffered.
The German documentary makers claim Bahrain's state press agency, BNA, put out three separate reports confirming Sheikh Salman was the head of the investigation committee, tasked with finding those who took part in the protests.
Sheikh Salman's lawyers, based in London, denied the committee ever existed when confronted by the WDR programme.
"I am an example of it, and I have evidence. What Sheikh Salman claims, is a big lie.
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