ICC launch inquiry on betting (15 December 1998)
THE International Cricket Council are to launch an inquiry into the recent wave of match-fixing and betting allegations
15-Dec-1998
15 December 1998
ICC launch inquiry on betting
By Nelson Clare
THE International Cricket Council are to launch an inquiry into
the recent wave of match-fixing and betting allegations.
Jagmohan Dalmiya, the president of cricket's world governing
body, said the situation had reached a point where the ICC could
no longer sit on the fence and ignore the effects of the claims.
"Unfortunately, the very fabric of the great game is being
damaged due to the charges of match fixing or betting brought by
the players," he said.
The move follows recent confessions by Shane Warne and Mark Waugh
that they took money from a bookmaker for providing information
about weather and pitches during a tour of Sri Lanka in 1994, and
investigations into match fixing in Pakistan.
The ICC's executive board will meet in Christchurch, New Zealand,
next month to consider setting up a commission to investigate the
charges, said Dalmiya, who added that the investigation reflected
a definitive shift in ICC policy.
"The ICC cannot merely be a passive spectator," he said, "and our
intervention in the matter at the earliest is essential. It's
time for the ICC to step in as these allegations are spreading
like a wild infection.
"If anybody is found guilty then stringent action should be
taken. This is in the best interest of the game and, if
necessary, past probes which were closed earlier would be
reopened."
In the past the governing body had left the allegations to be
dealt with by the individual boards of the nine Test-playing
nations as they saw fit.
"Circumstances are such that now we should step in," said
Dalmiya.
Source :: Electronic Telegraph (https://www.telegraph.co.uk)