The Borneo Post (Sabah)

The hunch that put Nepalese football in the dock

-

KATHMANDU: Like most Nepali football fans, Sarbendra Khanal was bitterly disappoint­ed when the country crashed out of World Cup qualifying in 2011. But the veteran investigat­or was also suspicious.

The Himalayan nation was never expected to reach the World Cup in Brazil, or even come particular­ly close. But after results like the thumping 9-0 defeat to Jordan, something seemed amiss.

“Every time I watched a match, it always seemed to end in a zero for Nepal,” Khanal, chief of the Metropolit­an Police Crime Division in Kathmandu, told AFP. “I just couldn’t understand why we kept losing.”

His hunch was confirmed by suspicious betting patterns reported by the Sportradar monitoring service, which has a partnershi­p with the Asian Football Confederat­ion.

And it led to a money trail that has now left six people, including Nepal’s former captain, goalkeeper and a coach, facing match-fixing claims that could earn them life sentences for treason.

Five of the accused, who all deny involvemen­t in match-fixing, were released on bail at a court hearing on Tuesday. The sixth, a physiother­apist, has been charged in absentia.

With Nepal’s soccer chief Ganesh Thapa also being probed by FIFA for alleged embezzleme­nt and bribery, and the world body itself convulsed by corruption claims, the six are not the most high-profile football figures currently facing accusation­s.

But they could be the most heavily punished after prosecutor­s opted for treason charges rather than other options which carry lighter sentences.

“Stealing doesn’t really cover it... this case is about people who played on behalf of millions of Nepalis and agreed to lose matches again and again,” Khanal said.

- Betting syndicates ======================

Khanal, 49, began his investigat­ion after he was promoted to head the crime division this year. He started with former defender Anjan KC, who became a coach after injury cut short his career. The 28-year-old’s lifestyle and close ties to Dinesh ‘Chari’ Adhikari, a local gangster who died in a police shoot-out last year, immediatel­y raised suspicions.

“He frequented casinos, spent huge amounts on imported cars and big houses... he was living beyond his means and we were wondering where the money came from,” Khanal said.

A scan of KC’s bank account revealed transactio­ns between the coach and suspected matchfixer­s based in Singapore and Malaysia.

According to the charge-sheet seen by AFP, sums ranging from $1,000 to $7,000 were deposited in accounts belonging to the coach, four players, their relatives and the team physiother­apist -- all courtesy of the alleged overseas betting syndicates.

The discovery was followed by a coordinate­d series of arrests last month.

In addition to KC, skipper Sagar Thapa and goalkeeper Ritesh Thapa, defender Sandip Rai and former team-mate Bikash Singh Chhetri were also taken into custody on allegation­s of matchfixin­g over a period of eight years.

“We believe that KC was the ringleader, he knew which players needed money and he targeted the ones who would agree to lose matches,” Khanal said.

 ?? AFP photo ?? Nepalese footballer­s SagarThapa (R),Anjam KC (C) and Bikash Singh Chhetri (L) talk with the media outside a special court in Kathmandu on November 10, 2015. A court granted bail on November 10 to Nepal’s national football captain and four other players charged with treason over alleged match-fixing in World Cup qualifiers, according to official documents and a defence lawyer. -
AFP photo Nepalese footballer­s SagarThapa (R),Anjam KC (C) and Bikash Singh Chhetri (L) talk with the media outside a special court in Kathmandu on November 10, 2015. A court granted bail on November 10 to Nepal’s national football captain and four other players charged with treason over alleged match-fixing in World Cup qualifiers, according to official documents and a defence lawyer. -

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia