ICC president to miss meeting (7 January 1999)
A death in the family has forced International Cricket Council president Jagmohan Dalmiya to miss the important executive committee meeting in Christchurch on Sunday and Monday
07-Jan-1999
7 January 1999
ICC president to miss meeting
The Christchurch Press
A death in the family has forced International Cricket Council
president Jagmohan Dalmiya to miss the important executive committee
meeting in Christchurch on Sunday and Monday.
Dalmiya's mother died in India and he has remained there in mourning,
meaning a stand-in chairman will be required for the high-profile
gathering, at which the ICC stand on match-fixing will be determined.
New Zealand's representative, Sir John Anderson, said last night that
the replacement chairman was likely to be Dalmiya's predecessor in
the role, Sir Clyde Walcott.
"It's a bit of a tragedy he cannot be here, but we will try for a
video link-up." Dalmiya was a vocal supporter of action being taken
against match-fixing and bribery and issued a strongly worded
statement about getting the ICC executive to deal with the matter
when it met in Christchurch.
High moral standards
Sir John said New Zealand's stance on the issue was clear: "Our board
wants the highest moral standards and ethics in the game and will
support whatever policy comes out of that."
He said it was likely the ICC would present a united front on the
issue and would establish the structure and processes for dealing
with any cricketer found guilty of being involved in betting or
bribery. Sir John felt it was unlikely that the present dispute
between the Pakistani and Australian boards over Shane Warne and Mark
Waugh taking money from a bookmaker for pitch and team details could
be legislated against retrospectively.
"The matter was dealt with at the time, fines imposed and the ICC
informed. No fresh evidence appears to have come to light to reopen
the matter," he said.
Sir John likened the proposed ICC deterrents on match-fixing and
betting to existing drug policies in sport.
Source :: The Christchurch Press (https://www.press.co.nz/)