Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Al Jazeera may not part with sting details with ICC

- Soumitra Bose

I ask Al Jazeera to release to us all the material they have relating to corruption in cricket. We will conduct a full, thorough and fair investigat­ion. DAVE RICHARDSON, ICC CEO

NEWDELHI: Doha-based Al Jazeera is reluctant to share with the Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) all the evidence it has in its possession that suggests at least four Test matches in 2016-17 in the sub-continent were influenced by match-fixers.

The TV channel’s sting operation has shaken the cricketing world and the ICC is particular­ly worried because the “Cricket’s Match Fixers” programme on Al Jazeera last week hinted that officials in cricket’s headquarte­rs in Dubai may not be clean.

The programme claimed that the stadium manager at Galle, Sri Lanka may have doctored the pitch at the behest of fixers and suggested minor Twenty20 events had also been targeted. It also alleged incidents of spot-fixing in a Chennai Test between England and India in December 2016 and the Australia-india Test in Ranchi in March 2017.

On Friday, ICC CEO Dave Richardson said in a statement: “I ask Al Jazeera to release to us all the material they have relating to corruption in cricket. We will conduct a full, thorough and fair investigat­ion and ensure no stone is left unturned as we examine all allegation­s of corruption made in the programme. To do so, we need to see all the evidence they state they possess.”

Al Jazeera is unlikely to oblige in a hurry.

ICC MEET PREMATURE

Phil Rees, Acting Director of Investigat­ive Journalism at Al Jazeera said with regard to a potential meeting with ICC that the broadcaste­r had to “take into account ongoing legal considerat­ions, including potential criminal investigat­ions into the matchfixin­g allegation­s in Sri Lanka and India. That being the case, a meeting with ICC would be premature at this stage.”

Rees added: “It should also be borne in mind that in certain respects the broadcast puts ICC itself under the spotlight, although we are confident that this will not ultimately be a bar to cooperatio­n in due course”.

Justice Mukul Mudgal, whose investigat­ion in the wake of the 2013 IPL spot-fixing and betting scandal led to the ouster of several top BCCI officials, said anticorrup­tion units are powerless against bookies and match-fixers.

Given the limitation­s ICC has in investigat­ing fixing, Al Jazeera’s reluctance is but natural. A source in the know of things said: “How many times has it (ICC) detected match-fixing itself? ICC primarily reacts to media stories.”

It is learnt that ICC wants Al Jazeera to reveal its sources. The channel has 15 hours of footage and claims the evidence is compelling enough. But all details may not reach the ICC since the D-company, a term used for an organised crime group controlled by underworld don Dawood Ibrahim, is at large and lives are at risk.

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