Arrest Over Cricket 'Match-Fixing' At Lords

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

Tainted Pak trio will meet Scotland Yard today

Pakistan’s tainted trio of Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir will on Wednesday face another round of questioning from the Scotland Yard for their alleged involvement in the ‘spot-fixing’ scandal that has rocked international cricket even as England’s Players’ body demanded their ouster from the Twenty20 and ODI series here. (Read: What is spot fixing?)

The trio, which has been implicated in the scandal after a sting operation by a British tabloid, is set to be quizzed by the Scotland Yard for the second time but they are not in danger of being arrested, a Pakistan Cricket Board official said. (Pics: Past incidents)

Their meeting with Pakistan High Commission officials here has, however, been postponed to Thursday. ICC CEO Haroon Lorgat will meet PCB chief Ijaz Butt as scheduled in London today to discuss the scandal that has plunged the game into a crisis.

The trio will now miss Pakistan’s practice match against Somerset starting tomorrow as that will clash with their meeting with PCB and High Commission officials at the High Commission here. (Read: PCB won’t drop players without proof)

“The trio of captain Salman Butt and bowlers Mohammad Amir and Mohammad Asif had been due to meet PCB chairman Ijaz Butt and the country’s High Commissioner in London today. But it has emerged that the talks have been put back and now clash with the team’s next fixture, which gets underway tomorrow,” ‘Sky News’ reported. (Video Special: Pak match-fixing scandal)

Pakistan team manager Yawar Saeed had yesterday said that the three would only face a PCB internal inquiry at the High Commission in London but it has now emerged that they will be questioned by Scotland Yard. (Watch: Did Pakistan fix these matches? | Pak players caught on tape)

He said no player has been charged as yet nor any case registered against them and they are available for the forthcoming Twenty20 and one-day series.

“As it stands now, the players have only been questioned by Scotland Yard. No one has been charged neither has Scotland Yard found any incriminating evidence against any player,” a PCB official said.

“We have hired a barrister to assist the players and will be present when they meet with Scotland Yard detectives today. The questioning is part of routine investigation but all the players who are being questioned are available for selection and play in the coming series,” he added.

The Pakistan High Commission has also asked the Scotland Yard to provide it with a preliminary report on the investigations.

The investigations are still on but England’s Professional Cricketers Association wants the three to be dropped immediately so that the remaining tour does not become a “sideshow” to the murky scandal.

http://www.ndtv.com/article/cricket/match-fixing-tainted-trio-to-be-quizzed-by-scotland-yard-48734?trendingnow?trendingnow

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

Match fixing scam is a conspiracy of British NP
Chief of the International Cricket Council (ICC), Haroon Lorgart, has said that the latest match fixing scam is a conspiracy of a British tabloid weekly to defame the cricket team, SAMAA reported Wednesday.

Haroon Lorgat, talking to a foreign website in London, said that the criticism on the security and anti-corruption unit of ICC regarding match fixing is baseless. This unit works on a specific set method and does not have the right to arrest, capture or hurt anyone.

He added that the ICC will not expand the limited role of the anti-corruption unit which is providing full assistance to British police.

“The anti-corruption unit of ICC is performing its duty and as the chief executive of ICC, I am satisfied with its performance,” Haroon Logart added. SAMAA

http://www.samaa.tv/News24931-Match_fixing_scam_is_a_conspiracy_of_British_tabloid_weekly_ICC_Chief_.aspx

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

Pakistan match-fixing claims: ICC promises swift action

http://www.guardian.co.uk/sport/video/2010/sep/01/pakistan-cricket-betting-scandal-cricket

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

http://dailymailnews.com/0910/01/FrontPage/index1.php

Check this it says its all by India and RAW lol :smiley:

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

next thing u know, the Taliban will be involved!

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

Welcome to fandom hell
Aka the world of the Pakistan supporter, where embarrassment, depression and denial thrive, and the truth lies in a corner, dead on arrival

Imran Yusuf

Things simply cannot get any worse for a Pakistan cricket fan - except maybe if mum and dad called to say, “Child, it’s time for the truth. You were adopted. Your biological father is actually a man from Punjab called Ijaz Butt. We believe he was a cricketer many moons ago. Though not very good. But he’s on TV a lot!”

:omg: :rotfl:

That apart, each of us has reached the nadir. For the past few years we have stared into the abyss of cricketing faith. The stare has intensified with every new scandal and crushing disappointment. Now it’s beyond a stare. The abyss finally said “What’re ya lookin at?” and we said “Nuffin” and it said “What’id you say?” and we said, “You ‘erd me, I said I’m lookin’ at nuffin!” and now we’re locked in a full-on body brawl. For the record, the abyss isn’t half as tough as it looks.

But it’s still a horrible place to be, down here in fandom hell. Every Pakistan supporter is screening reruns in their heads, wondering if that “reckless” shot was actually perfectly executed, if the “indiscipline” of the bowlers was in actual fact part of a perfect plan. Every one of us is replaying those countless times we woke up at 4am to catch the first session on the other side of the world, with a spouse or a pet or just our better self grumbling their bafflement, wondering if it was all a waste: the time, the energy, the belief, the 300 quid invested in the espresso machine. Are we all fools? Was it all fake? Have we been locked in a Matrix? The bright colours of the Neo Sports channel all of a sudden take on a sinister complexion.

There is also embarrassment. Countless times we have defended our team, citing post-colonial hang-ups, incomprehension of our genius, envy of our guile, special cases of poverty and miseducation, and how Darrell Hair must have had a childhood of neglect, as reasons for our frequent and intimate relations with cricket’s old mistress: controversy. “It’s not what it looks like,” we’d say, and amazingly we’d often be given - and always give ourselves - the benefit of the doubt. We’d be caught with our pants down and yet we’d have no shame.

One acquaintance is secretly delighted, claiming he will use the time he would have squandered on cricket to learn Russian and read Pushkin in the original, his lifelong ambition. More likely, he will now fill the long Sunday afternoons downing Russian vodka, mumbling “no-ball” and miming the umpire’s signal to himself in bitter solitude

Sometimes we did nothing wrong. Other times we were plumb in front and were let off. The fact is, we should have walked and addressed our failings, like a batsman gets to grips with a technical flaw through long sessions in the nets. But we didn’t, and now the world of Pakistan cricket stinks on ice. It’s become such a rotten place that Ian Botham wouldn’t even send his mother-in-law there these days.

Some have given up on the green team forever. One acquaintance is secretly delighted, claiming he will use the time he would have squandered on cricket to learn Russian and read Pushkin in the original, his lifelong ambition. More likely, he will now fill the long Sunday afternoons downing Russian vodka, mumbling “no-ball” and miming the umpire’s signal to himself in bitter solitude: it is true when they say the personal cost of this tragedy goes beyond those directly involved. Another friend, previously a Pakistan cricket fanatic, has gone and traced distant family origins in a bid to reinvent himself. It turns out he can claim lineage from Uttar Pradesh, a state in north India, and also from some remote part of what is now Afghanistan. After no deliberation at all, he has decided to support India.

Most of us, however, cannot jump ship, though we’re not sure where we’re sailing to, either. Not with this band of pirates. Not when we ourselves are part of a system of piracy, of take what you can and make excuses later (if you’re caught). I have heard calls for a revolution.

Our country’s government and society might be beyond our control, but we can take charge of the cricket board. Storm the PCB! Heads must roll and butts be kicked, they say. We no longer have the luxury to be a tolerated laughing stock. We no longer have the luxury to sit on our butts. Indeed, we no longer have the luxury to make Butt jokes - that’s how serious this is, they say. It’s life or death for Pakistan cricket. It’s now or never.

One is unconvinced by the apocalyptic rhetoric. One is unconvinced by the Pakistan captain’s semi-denials of the allegations. One is unconvinced by what one has seen of Pakistan cricket this summer, this year, this decade, this era. One is unconvinced by Alistair Cook’s front-foot stokeplay going into the Ashes but that’s another matter and I seem to have gone off point. The idea is that one’s confidence in the truth of cricket has been shattered, and every fan has been left utterly confused. If only we were using the UDRS: now that would clear everything up, wouldn’t it, for this is a simple game, is it not? If you’re out, you’re out, and if you’re in, you’re in, and if you cross the line… it’s time for a change.

Re: Arrest Over Cricket 'Match-Fixing' At Lords

Are hum na tu eidi samaj ka pasa lyea tha "faraz"
zalimo na match fixing ka ilzam laga diya

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

hahaha lol :omg:

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

Pakistan cricket trio are unlikely to face criminal charges
*
• Butt, Asif and Amir should escape criminal charges
• ‘Spot-fixing’ players set to face officials tomorrow*

The three Pakistan cricketers at the centre of a global storm over betting allegations are highly unlikely to face criminal charges, legal experts said today.

The Test captain, Salman Butt, and the pace bowlers Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir, left their base in Taunton this morning for a Kensington hotel ahead of a pivotal meeting in London tomorrow with the Pakistan high commissioner, the Pakistan Cricket Board and lawyers. Informal talks continued at the hotel where the three players are staying, with officials from the PCB, the England and Wales Cricket Board, the International Cricket Commission and the high commission involved.

The three players are expected to be dropped from the rest of the tour, although not formally suspended, while investigations continue. However, some Pakistan officials are still believed to be arguing that they should be allowed to play in the forthcoming Twenty20 and one-day matches.

While their team-mates are in action against Somerset in a warm-up match 162 miles away, the trio will be questioned over the allegations in Sunday’s News of the World that they were paid to bowl no‑balls at specific points during last week’s fourth Test at Lord’s.

Following further questioning from police, they will return to join their team-mates on Saturday. Scotland Yard detectives raided the team hotel on Saturday and seized mobile phones, laptops and money.

But legal experts with direct experience of other sports integrity cases believe it is highly unlikely the three cricketers will face any criminal charges.

“One of the massive problems in any sport is defining how you actually define what is happening as criminal,” Neill Blundell, the partner and head of the fraud group at the law firm Eversheds, who acted for one of the defendants in the Kieren Fallon case, said.

“What they often have difficulty doing is evidentially linking what is going on with the betting. If all you’ve got is one person saying certain things, it can be very difficult to link that behaviour to what is going on on the pitch, even if it seems logical to do so.”

Blundell, who represented Fallon’s co-defendant Miles Rodgers against charges of conspiracy to defraud, said the police and prosecutors would tread carefully following a string of high-profile cases in which they had failed to make charges stick.

“Proving that link beyond a reasonable doubt is very difficult to do. What might appear strong evidence initially can be very difficult for a law enforcement agency. As has been proved by other similar cases, proving guilt and making evidence admissible can be very difficult.”

Others sports integrity experts said that because it appeared no bet had actually been placed, it was difficult to see how a charge of conspiracy to defraud – the route most expect the police to go down – or the untested offence of cheating introduced in the 2005 Gambling Act could be made to stick against the players.

Rick Parry, the former Liverpool FC chief executive who chaired a government-ordered review of sports integrity issues, agreed. “I don’t think [the case] has any evidence at all,” Parry told CricInfo. “Unless the News of the World placed a bet – which would be highly unlikely because in so doing they would have carried out a criminal act – then there doesn’t appear to be any betting activity at all associated with these particular allegations. It places the ball, to pardon the pun, squarely back into the hands of the cricket authorities.”

Mazhar Majeed, the 35-year-old Croydon businessman at the centre of the News of the World allegations, who was alleged to have told the Pakistan players to deliberately bowl no balls in return for £150,000, was arrested on Sunday and released on bail. Today it emerged Majeed had been arrested as part of a separate money-laundering investigation by Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs.

With the players unlikely to face criminal charges, there is greater onus on the next move of the ICC’s anti-corruption and security unit. The ACSU has been in constant communication with the police and will pool evidence it has collected over several months with that garnered by the News of the World and law enforcement agencies. Its investigators will not question the players directly until police give them the go ahead to do so.

Haroon Lorgat, who arrived in London today to meet the PCB chairman, Ijaz Butt, said he expects the ICC’s investigation to come to “some sort of conclusion” by the weekend. England face Pakistan in the first of two Twenty20 matches on Sunday, when it is understood the News of the World is planning to publish further revelations.

Reports in India today contained further details of the ASCU’s investigation into spot-fixing claims against Pakistan players. The Times of India claimed it wa examining recordings of conversations and text messages exchanged between Pakistan players and Majeed even during the Twenty20 World Cup in the West Indies.

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

^^^

Good :jhanda:

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

ICC hits back at claims that its anti-corruption unit is ineffective
**
Governing body rejects calls to disband taskforce as Pakistan trio set to learn fate**

As if it did not have enough on its plate, the ICC was assailed yesterday about its failed attempts to clean up the game. The governing body was clearly enraged by the suggestion that it was standing by while corruption among players went unchecked.

With three Pakistan cricketers at the centre of corruption claims meeting government officials today following allegations of nefarious activities in the fourth Test against England, the ICC’s role was questioned.

As the trio left the team’s base in Taunton for London, doubts continued to be expressed about the work of the Anti-Corruption and Security Unit. There were veiled suggestions that it had dragged its heels and outlandish claims that it should be abolished.

Pakistan’s tour seems set to continue and the warm-up game against Somerset will proceed. But the completion of the seven limited overs internationals – two Twenty20s in Cardiff and five 50-over matches – may depend on the fate of the men who have become the focus of attention.

Salman Butt, the Test captain, and the fast bowlers, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Aamer, are due to see Pakistan’s High Commissioner to discuss the potentially damning allegations made in the News of the World last Sunday. The report said that Asif and Aamer had bowled deliberate no-balls in the fourth Test against England at Lord’s with the encouragement of Butt.

They were reported to be acting at the behest of a fixer called Mazhar Majeed, an agent to some of the players, who claimed to have links with illegal betting markets on the sub-continent. Majeed was arrested by police on Saturday night and released on bail without being charged on Monday.

It is clear that England, who have maintained an official public silence since the end of the fourth Test in gloomy circumstances last Sunday, want the limited-overs matches to proceed without the trio. Although moves to suspend them appear to have been abandoned, the feeling in the home dressing room is that the matches would be a laughing stock among the public if they were allowed to play.

Pakistan is taking the issue seriously but it also has a history of reacting furiously to claims of misdeeds among their players and then backtracking later. However, the involvement of the High Commission suggests that a compromise is probable. The trio might not be formally suspended because the police investigation is continuing but the expedient policy would be to overlook them.

As the players left the Taunton hotel yesterday morning, Aamer, for whose plight there has been widespread sympathy, was jovial. Butt, captain of the side for five Tests, and Asif, were more restrained, although Butt, when asked if he thought he would be returning, replied: “Why not?” They will definitely take no part in today’s match. Their colleagues practised in public yesterday after doing so behind closed doors on Tuesday.

The case and its fallout has brought criticism on the ICC’s policy for dealing with match-fixing. The organisation established its ACSU after widespread match-fixing was exposed 10 years ago. Players from almost every team in the world were named at one time or other but the most serious charges were laid against Hansie Cronje, Mohammad Azharuddin and Salim Malik, captains respectively of South Africa, India and Pakistan.

An ICC spokesman made it clear yesterday that it was not amused by comments about the ACSU’s ineffectiveness. Australia’s opening batsman, Shane Watson, said it had not dealt with corruption properly and the former Pakistan player and selector Basit Ali said it should be disbanded.

But the feeling at the ICC is that the problem of match rigging and spot-fixing – whereby certain sections in a match are tampered with – would have been much worse without the unit.

The ACSU is headed by Sir Ronnie Flanagan, former head of the Royal Ulster Constabulary, and has five regional security managers attached to the leading countries. In England, Ronald Hope has been a regular, though barely noticed sight, at matches.

“Players are given briefings before every series about what they should do,” said an ICC spokesman. “They are informed about the anti-corruption code but there is very little that can be done if they depart from that.” Aamer, while being only 18, from a background of poverty and easily influenced by his superiors in the team, did not go into the fray in total ignorance. Like all players in Test countries he was told about the anti-corruption code. More worrying may be the fact that the ICC seems unable to do anything about players it already suspects. It has been made clear that Butt and Kamran Akmal were suspected of wrongdoing in matches but still both have been virtually ever present in Pakistan’s side recently.

Akmal was dropped during their calamitous tour of Australia last winter after missing four chances of varying difficulty in the second Test match at Sydney which they lost by 36 runs after leading by 206 on first innings. That has now fallen under renewed suspicion following the NOTW report. But Akmal, though fined by the Pakistan Cricket Board for being a disruptive influence, was recalled for their visit to England.

Butt, it seems, was already under scrutiny when he was appointed captain in June following the sudden resignation of Shahid Afridi when Pakistan lost to Australia at Lord’s by 150 runs. Not everyone was happy with Pakistan’s dual collapses in that match but Butt was the top scorer in both innings.

If the ICC was thinking of fingering him it must have been alarmed when Pakistan made him captain. The organisation is talking a good game but if it cannot act decisively it risks respect for cricket ebbing away, beginning this weekend.

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

hahaha..

HAAHAHAHAH

HA AHAHAHA AH AHAHH !!!

I love it !

Cricketplaya probably wrote this.

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

If it wasn’t so funny it would be depressing.

What kind of article is this ?

I mean we have our share of crappy journalism in India but this piece is schoolboy stuff. First of all there are so many typos in the article. Secondly, it implicates every possible Indian names that the writer could think of . Turns out Tendulkar & Dravid (two venerated players) are into match fixing too. They apparently introduced Majeed to other players with the connivance of RAW.

It’s bizarre how various paragraphs in this article start with “Daily Mail investigations have revealed…”. Some investigation this is.

You have to sympathize with the mentally disabled people who buy into this garbage.

Re: Arrest Over Cricket 'Match-Fixing' At Lords

^ shukar karo he spared 9/11 RAW connection :D

Re: Arrest Over Cricket 'Match-Fixing' At Lords

From Cricinfo:

"The three players have said they are extremely disturbed with what has happened in the past one week, especially with regard to their alleged involvement in the crime," Hasan said. "They have mentioned that they are entirely innocent of the whole episode and shall defend their innocence as such. They further maintain that on account of the mental torture that has deeply affected them, they are not in the right frame of mind to play the remaining match, therefore they have requested the PCB not to consider them until their names are cleared."

If they were innocent why weren't they protesting their innocence until now! I am so turned off by our team and country and glad I haven't gone back to Pakistan for the last 15 years!

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

http://www.cricinfo.com/inline/content/image/475544.jpg?alt=

Re: Arrest Over Cricket 'Match-Fixing' At Lords

LOL @ Amir-Butt tweet..

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

**

:biggthumb:
**

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

BBC News
High Commissioner: ‘Pakistan cricketers have been set up’
.
Pakistan’s High Commissioner in London has insisted that the three players suspected of involvement in a betting scam are innocent.

Wajid Hasan, who has interviewed the three men, alleged that they had been set up, saying that the video evidence could have been filmed after the alleged ‘no balls’.

A spokeswoman for the newspaper involved said: “The News of the World refuses to respond to such ludicrous allegations”.

The BBC understands both the Metropolitan Police and the International Cricket Council are treating the News Of the World video as authentic.

The BBC also understands that claims from the Pakistan High Commissioner that the video was faked will not form part of the three cricketers’ defence.
.

Re: Arrest Over Cricket ‘Match-Fixing’ At Lords

lagta hay Wajid kakay ne Dailymail.com parh liya :sunnyboy: