Icc Match Fixing Scandal Thread

Sharkman84

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http://www.news.com.au/sport/cricke...e-fixing-scandal/story-fndpt0dy-1226683462474

India files in Hansie Cronje fixing scandal


AFP
July 23, 2013
1:45AM
461912-cricket-rsa-cronje-corruption-10years-file.jpg
Indian police have filed match fixing charges against bookmakers and the late South African captain Hansie Cronje, shown here in a cross-examination in Cape Town in 2000.Source: AFP
INDIAN police filed charges over a match-fixing scandal involving the late South African captain Hansie Cronje, 13 years after the revelations sent shockwaves through the cricketing world.

Police filed the charges in a New Delhi court against bookmakers and Cronje himself, who died in a plane crash in 2002, over allegations of fixing dating back to South Africa's tour of India in 2000.







The charges are the first by Indian police over the scandal, which revealed the shady world of Indian bookmakers in cricket.
"There are six accused in this case, three of them are on bail while two are abroad," Inspector Keshav Kumar told the court.
"The sixth is Hansie Cronje, who is dead," said Kumar, the investigating officer in the case.
Cronje, once the darling of South African cricket, was banned from the sport for life after admitting taking bribes from bookies in exchange for providing match information and influencing games during the 2000 tour.
Cronje admitted to a South African commission investigating the scandal to taking thousands of dollars in bribes from bookies to underperform, although he denied match-fixing itself.
Delhi police have alleged that Cronje persuaded some of his teammates, including Herschelle Gibbs, to agree to underperform in a one-day match in 2000, including by making fewer runs than he might otherwise have tallied.
Gibbs and bowler Henry Williams were both banned from playing for six-months and fined by South African authorities over their admissions in the scandal.
The scandal broke when New Delhi police, working on an unrelated extortion case, tapped a telephone conversation between Cronje and one of the bookies, Sanjeev Chawla.
Chawla is believed to be living in the UK and Indian police hope to seek his extradition now that the charge sheet has been placed before the court.
"We will now request the court to grant approval to seek extradition of Chawla from the UK to India," said Additional Commissioner of Police, Ravindra Yadav.
"The UK government does not allow extradition without the charge sheet. We are almost sure Chawla is in England," he said.
Yadav said the case was one of "criminal conspiracy" and has only now been filed in court after police finally received in January this year voice samples from tapped phone conversations.
"This is criminal conspiracy. People went to the ground to watch the games thinking they would be played in the true spirit. They did not know the outcome was fixed. That's why we have filed the charges," he said.
Police named the accused as bookmakers and gamblers Rajesh Kalra, Krishan Kumar and Sunil Dara -- who are all on bail -- and Chawla and Manmohan Khattar who are overseas.
Cronje died in June 2002 when a light plane in which he was travelling crashed in bad weather in South Africa.
Monday's action came after Delhi police chief Neeraj Kumar told local media that he planned to file charges in the Cronje case and a separate Indian Premier League spot-fixing scandal, before the end of the month.
Kumar told the Hindustan Times newspaper on Saturday that he was working on tying up "some loose ends" before his retirement at the end of July, including in both cases.
The Indian Premier League (IPL) was rocked by allegations of spot-fixing in May this year, with some 29 people arrested including three Indian players. The cricketers, who have denied wrongdoing, are accused of deliberately bowling badly in exchange for tens of thousands of dollars from bookies.
Betting on sports is illegal in India except at horse races, but major betting syndicates have been in operation for many years.
 
Whenever I see pictures of poor Hansie these days all I can think of is him on the 12th man with all the betting puns lol.
 
India technically side away their recent IPL Scandal !! have anyone noticed ??


That's probably why they brought up the long deceased former South African captain Hansie Cronje back in the picture.

The BCCI are doing all they can to hide their corruption by deliberately diverting the public's attention away from it.
 
That's probably why they brought up the long deceased former South African captain Hansie Cronje back in the picture.

The BCCI are doing all they can to hide their corruption by deliberately diverting the public's attention away from it.


yes. your guess is right. Instantly They focused Ashraful's Scandal for their protection.... They are really clever!!
 
yes. your guess is right. Instantly They focused Ashraful's Scandal for their protection.... They are really clever!!


Well I don't call the BCCI the Board of Control for Corruption in India for nothing. :p

I've seen some corrupt organisations over the years but nothing goes as close to being as corrupt as the BCCI.

Not even the corruption riddled football world governing body FIFA goes close to this.

They even took down little Kenya when Maurice Odumbe was banned for life for match fixing yet blokes like Mohammad Azharuddin get theirs overturned and they are allowed to just walk back into our great game.

It's a disgrace really.
 
Seems to be more and more cases of this happening in recent times. I'm not sure why players (as well as officials and others) would take such a risk knowing the consequences are so serious.
 
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