CBI team questions Ajay Sharma in London
The stage was set for a confrontation between the Government and the officials of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) just before the crucial meeting in New Delhi on August 1
AC Ganesh
01-Aug-2000
The stage was set for a confrontation between the Government and the
officials of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) just
before the crucial meeting in New Delhi on August 1. The code of
conduct issue almost came to a boiling point between the two sides but
things subsequently softened with both the parties calling truce. The
board officials are to meet the Union Sports Minister SS Dhindsa today
to hand over a 'Vision 2005 Report'.
The healing touch was provided by the Minister of State for Sports
Shahnawaz Hussain in New Delhi on Monday. Talking to the media, he
said "We don't want any confrontation with BCCI. We want the board to
co-operate with the Government in rooting out corruption from the
game," and added "We are hopeful that a very positive outcome will be
there from tomorrow's meeting."
Meanwhile, a two member Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) team of
joint director RN Sawani and DIG YK Singh, who are at present in
London, questioned former Indian player Ajay Sharma. When contacted by
a news agency, Sharma said the team had met him on Friday and asked
several questions about the match-fixing controversy. He added "I have
made my stand clear and answered every single query of the CBI
officials." Sharma left the country shortly after the scandal broke.
He is in England playing league cricket and is expected to return in
September after his contract ends.
The investigation team also met officials of Scotland Yard and sought
their co-operation in the scandal as the case had international
ramifications and needed a thorough inquiry into almost every cricketplaying nation, according to highly placed agency sources. The sources
said the team would request Scotland Yard police to trace whether any
of the Indian players had bank accounts in the country and if so the
transactions made therein. The high level two-member team will spend a
week in London meeting various agencies including Interpol before
returning home.