International Cricket Council's anti-corruption
director Sir Paul Condon on Wednesday said in New
Delhi it was the duty of all cricket playing
nations to carry forward the investigations from
where the Central Bureau of Investigation had left
it.
"We will take forward the investigations from here
and ensure co-ordinated efforts to remove the
menace of betting and match-fixing in cricket,"
Condon told reporters on the concluding day of his
visit to India.
Earlier in the day, Condon met Union Sports
Minister Uma Bharti, who described the meeting as
a purely "courtesy call".
Condon made it clear that after amassing "huge
evidence" against some foreign players, the ICC
would "further probe" into the role of these
cricketers named by the CBI of either having
received or offered money by the bookies.
"We have now concluded talks with key figures from
the BCCI, CBI, Delhi Police and Indian government
to gather information in areas where India's
premier investigating agency has no jurisdiction,"
Condon said.
Besides Condon, the other members including Martin
Hawkins and Bob Samanney (both from ICC), Desmond
Fernando from Sri Lanka, Australia's Greg Melick
and Tim Gresson (New Zealand), met the CBI
officials headed by the Joint Director of CBI RN
Sawani and reviewed the evidence against the
foreign players.
Commending the CBI report, the ICC anti-corruption
director said "the CBI report was a significant
step forward in the fight against corruption in
cricket and I congratulate the CBI on its
thoroughness and professionalism."
Condon made it clear that the ICC would not leave
any "stone unturned" in investigating these
allegations. "But equally players should not be
condemned without evidence being available. As a
result, we have been working to establish whether
this evidence can be uncovered."
Asked when the ICC would come out with some
results in the scandal, Condon said "this is not a
quick sprint but a marathon" and "all of us have
been made very welcome in India and have been
pleased by the constructive co-operation we have
received from the authorities."
He said the ICC would be coming out with
suggestions on how to stop this menace and in this
connection a two-member ICC team had gone to South
Africa and had interviewed sacked skipper Hansie
Cronje.
Condon said, however, that in the present world
where live matches and the internet was present,
it would be difficult to completely stop the
menace. "However, we will try our best," he added.
The 162-page CBI report on betting and matchfixing named ex-captains Alec Stewart (England),
Brian Lara (West Indies), Hansie Cronje (South
Africa), Arjuna Ranatunga and Aravinda D'Silva
(Sri Lanka), Martin Crowe (New Zealand) and Asif
Iqbal and Salim Malik (Pakistan). Apart from the
former skippers, the names of two more Australian
players Mark Waugh and Dean Jones also figured in
the CBI report.