CBI digging into player-underworld nexus, says Raghavan
Director of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), RK Raghavan told reporters in New Delhi on Tuesday that the agency was probing deeper into the unseemly nexus between cricketers and the underworld mafia
Sankhya Krishnan
14-Nov-2000
Director of the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), RK Raghavan told
reporters in New Delhi on Tuesday that the agency was probing deeper
into the unseemly nexus between cricketers and the underworld mafia.
"We are going deep into the nexus the underworld has with cricket
players and administrators. The nexus has been unearthed but the
dimensions are yet to be fully understood," Raghavan told Press Trust of
India.
Raghavan was careful not to name anyone but said the CBI's inquiry had
established the underworld connections of "a few Indian players". The
depositions of Azharuddin and ex-physio Ali Irani offer stark glimpses of
the underworld's involvement in the game. Azharuddin stated during his
interrogation that Abu Salem had rung him up on a couple of occasions
and requested him to fix some matches but he had refused while Irani
revealed that Azharuddin had told him once that as he was doing
matches for Anees Ibrahim, brother of Dawood, he could not do
business, as it were, with anyone else.
The CBI Director added that detectives from the agency were travelling
to Dubai and other parts of the Middle East to uncover conclusive
evidence in this regard. Raghavan also noted that the CBI report had
clearly warned that if the authorities continued to turn a blind eye, the
underworld could extend its tentacles further and 'turn wagering into an
organised racket' over which it exercised full control.
Raghavan was emphatic in his assertion that the CBI inquiry into the
match-fixing scandal did not end with the report presented to the
Government on November 1. Indeed he refused to rule out the possibility
of a supplementary report being drafted. "Our enquiry is alive. If
circumstances warrant we will come out with another report. We are
already going beyond the report we have submitted," he said.
He observed that apart from the national security implications of the
scandal, the gambling racket was also an instrument by which the
underworld indulged in money laundering. "There is no limit to the
ingenuity of the underworld in laundering money," said Raghavan who
recently attended an international conference on money laundering at
Vancouver, according to PTI.
Raghavan also disclosed that the CBI was considering the possibility of
prosecuting the two cricketers named in the report, Mohd. Azharuddin
and Ajay Sharma, who are public servants. He pointed out that under
Section 13 of the Prevention of Corruption Act, 'a public servant could be
charged with criminal misconduct if he obtains for himself or any other
person any pecuniary advantage by corrupt or illegal means', as reported
by PTI. The 'pecuniary advantage' need not necessarily be through abuse
of his own office.