ICC wants strict law against match-fixing in India for the reason


ICC wants strict law against match-fixing in India for the reason




A senior official of the International Cricket Council's (ICC) Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU) believes that declaring match-fixing in India a crime would be the 'most effective step' in a country where there is no 'stringent law' in the hands of the police. Too 'tied'. Legal experts have been advocating for many years to declare match-fixing a crime in India as the hands of the concerned authorities are bound by law while investigating corrupt activities in cricket.





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ICC ACU investigative coordinator Steve Richardson said, "There is no law yet." We have good relations with the Indian Police but their hands are also tied. "We will do everything possible to thwart the efforts of the corrupt and we do not allow them to operate freely and keep their lives as free as possible." "





Richardson said, "But with the enactment of the law in India, the whole situation will change." Right now we are investigating about 50 cases and most of them are related to India. If India makes laws regarding match-fixing, then it will be the most effective step in terms of securing the game.





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India has to host 2 ICC tournaments in the next 3 years and Richardson urged the Indian government to enact a law on match-fixing, as did its neighbor Sri Lanka, which declared corrupt activities a crime in South Asia in 2019. Has become the first country. He said, 'India will host ICC 2 competitions T20 World Cup (2021) and One Day World Cup (2023).'





Richardson and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) ACU chief Ajit Singh (Ajit Singh) were part of a panel discussion on the topic 'Does match-fixing in India need to be declared a crime'. Richardson said that such a law Instead of becoming players, those corrupt people will be stopped who are roaming freely.





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He said, "I can hand over the names of at least eight people to the Indian Police or the Government of India, who continue to commit crimes and constantly try to contact the players to fix the match." Officer Ajit Singh also admitted that there is no proper law for match-fixing. He said, "These are the people whom I would like their investigation to be under the match-fixing law."





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