Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Matchfixin­g a vital battle to win, says Uefa integrity chief Emilio Garcia

- Agence France-Presse sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

MANCHESTER: Combating matchfixin­g in football is absolutely crucial for the integrity of the sport, says Emilio Garcia UEFA’s head of disciplina­ry and integrity matters.

However, he concedes that it is not an easy task with the mafia behind a lot of corruption.

Garcia, who was speaking at the SoccerEx Global Football Convention, said it was crucial to get local authoritie­s in different countries on board.

“The fight against matchfixin­g is vital,” he said. “It is not easy because behind this we have the mafia and they are not normal guys.

“We need collaborat­ion from the local authoritie­s and cooperatio­n with the police because that is the main way to tackle the problem.

“We don’t have a problem with betting on football, there are several teams who have betting sponsors on their shirts. It is the illegal betting that we are concerned about and why we look at betting patterns.”

However, Ricardo de Buen, an arbitrator from the Court for Arbitratio­n and Sport (CAS), said there was a quandary in the battle on one of the scourges of the sport as exemplifie­d by Mexico for example.

“It is important that in some cases the state intervenes,” said De Buen, who has worked as an arbitrator at CAS for over 14 years.

“We have seen some ineffectiv­e punishment­s imposed by federation­s in matchfixin­g cases.

“However, on the other side of

GARCIA, WHO WAS SPEAKING AT THE SOCCEREX GLOBAL FOOTBALL CONVENTION, SAID IT WAS CRUCIAL TO GET LOCAL AUTHORITIE­S IN DIFFERENT COUNTRIES ON BOARD

the equation say a case cropped up in Mexico, and I’m not saying it has happened, you cannot prosecute in a criminal way because it is not a criminal offence there,” he added.

Former Swiss internatio­nal Ramon Vega said he had experience­d a few examples of pressure being put on players to fix matches in his time in Italy.

“Yes I experience­d this or noticed this when I was playing in Italy,” he said referring to the year he spent with Cagliari from 1996-97.

The 46-year-old believes that just as in the financial services industry there should be more co-operation between those who oversee the industry and national law forces.

“It is what happens in the world I work in now and it should be the same for football, that there is total co-operation and sharing of informatio­n between the two.”

Garcia for his part acknowledg­es that some countries law officers don’t see battling matchfixin­g as a top priority, no matter if they have good intentions in tackling it.

“We do need this co-operation from local authoritie­s otherwise it is very difficult to obtain informatio­n,” said Garcia.

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