Sonia Gandhi asks Government to speed up match fixing probe
Though the focus remained on South Africa and the submission of its interim report by Judge Edwin King to the government there, there was some action on the Indian front too
AC Ganesh
12-Aug-2000
Though the focus remained on South Africa and the submission
of its interim report by Judge Edwin King to the government
there, there was some action on the Indian front too. The
Union Finance Minister Yashwant Sinha on Friday made a
statement in the lower house of Parliament on the income tax
(IT) raids conducted on players, officials and bookies.
Sinha informed the Lok Sabha that the searches were conducted
under sec 132 of the IT in Delhi, Mumbai, Calcutta, Bangalore,
Hyderabad, Ahmedabad, Patiala and Chandigarh. He said the
search on cricketers, officials, bookies and their relatives
yielded around Rs 4 crores. "Seized papers and documents were
being examined and necessary action in accordance with the law
had been initiated," the Minister said.
Meanwhile, a TV channel reported that the status report
prepared by the IT department claims that the total cash
seized during the raids on the cricketers yielded only Rs. 25,
000. The report said jewellery worth Rs. 1.2 million and other
assets worth Rs 93,000 were also seized from the raids
conducted in the players homes.
On a separate front, Indian National Congress president Sonia
Gandhi has demanded that the investigation in the match-fixing
case be speeded up and be accorded top national priority
reports PTI. Addressing the party's students wing, National
Students Union of India (NSUI), Sonia said the scandal, which
is being probed by CBI, had disturbed all, particularly the
youth in the country.
In South Africa, the much awaited interim report turned out to
be a damp squib with no recommendations on any players. The
Commission Chairman Judge King said in Cape Town that "I will
not be making any recommendations at this stage as I will
still have to hear evidence from Hansie Cronje and others
again." King who heads the commission also gave a clearance to
the scheduled August 19 disciplinary hearings by the United
Cricket Board of South Africa (UCBSA). In a statement the
commission's chairman said "although there were no final
recommendations in the report, cricket authorities would be
able to convene a hearing on Herschelle Gibbs, Henry Williams
and Pieter Strydom."
Having decided that the Indian team should not participate in
the Sahara Cup, the Government should make amends by taking
this opportunity to speed up the ongoing investigation. It
should ask the concerned agencies to complete the probe before
the ICC knock out tournament in October so that a decision can
be arrived on the coach and those players on whom there is
needle of suspicion.