Millennium Post

SL seeks Indian help to tackle match-fixing

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COLOMBO: India has offered to assist Sri Lanka with its inquiry into match-fixing in cricket and drafting laws to combat cheating in the game, a Sri Lankan Cabinet minister said on Monday.

Sri Lanka’s petroleum minister Arjuna Ranatunga said India’s Central Bureau of Investigat­ion (CBI) could provide technical expertise in probing widespread allegation­s of corruption in cricket.

“We don’t have the expertise or the laws to deal with this problem in a proper manner. India promised to help us in drafting legislatio­n too,” Ranatunga said after returning from New Delhi.

The CBI named Ranatunga and his deputy Aravinda de Silva in a match-fixing investigat­ion in 2000 but the pair were cleared of any wrongdoing.

Sri Lanka promised to establish a special police unit to investigat­e match-fixing after a documentar­y aired in May alleged massive global corruption in cricket.

Galle groundsman Tharanga Indika and profession­al cricketer Tharindu Mendis allegedly speculated about fixing the pitch to ensure a result in under four

days in the Test against England.

Both men have been suspended by Sri Lanka Cricket pending an ICC investigat­ion. A third man, provincial coach Jeevantha Kulatunga, was also suspended.

Sanath Jayasuriya, a member of the 1996 World Cup winning squad, is under investigat­ion by the Internatio­nal Cricket Council’s anti-corruption unit, along with several others.

Jayasuriya has been charged for not cooperatin­g with a match-fixing probe and concealing informatio­n.

 ??  ?? Arjuna Ranatunga
Arjuna Ranatunga

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