Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Udesh Chanaka wins 13st Amateur Golf title Match-fixing laws by March

The new law proposes jail term and fine

- By Champika Fernando

Adraft Bill on the Prevention of Corruption and Match-Fixing in Sri Lanka which deems all sports-related corruption to be criminal offences attracting severe punishment­s has been sent to the Legal Draftsman's Department for finalising.

The sanctions include a jail term of up to five years, a fine not exceeding Rs 5mn, or both fine and imprisonme­nt. The draft includes amendments suggested by the Attor ney General's Department. A legal source confirmed that they are hoping the final draft will be ready by this week, to be presented to Parliament by March this year.

The new law will cover a wide range of corruption- related activities. They include engaging in betting, gambling, match-fixing, providing inside informatio­n for benefits, financial or otherwise, and any action that brings the sport into disrepute.

According to the Bill, concealing informatio­n, encouragin­g another person to conceal informatio­n, placing bets having received inside informatio­n and revealing such inside informatio­n to a third party to place bets also become criminal offences.

After a preliminar­y inquiry conducted by the Director General of Sports upon receipt of any informatio­n, a special unit-- Sports Investigat­ion Division ( SED)-- appointed by the Minister of Sports will further investigat­e, before asking law enforcemen­t authoritie­s for investigat­ion and prosecutio­n.

The SED, comprising seven members, will be headed by a retired Judge of the Appeal Court or the Supreme Court nominated by the Ministry of Justice and includes an attorney, a senior police office above the rank of SSP, two senior sportsmen and two members nominated by the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery or Corruption.

The proposed Bill is a major breakthrou­gh in terms of tackling sports-related corruption and comes in the wake of a full blown inquiry by the Internatio­nal Cricket Council ( ICC) into what they termed as "serious allegation­s of corruption­s" in the island nation.

Though match- fixing is a criminal offence in a number of other cricketing nations, including England and Australia, Sri Lanka has delayed in bringing in laws to criminaliz­e the offence until it reached boiling point with recent ICC investigat­ions. Last year, three former Sri Lankan cricketers were charged with corruption. The ICC on January 16 granted a 15-day amnesty for Sri Lankan cricketers and officials to come clean and cooperate with the ongoing probe.

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