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Anti-Corruption body stresses on educating players to combat fixing
ICC set up an anti-corruption body after three international captains were banned for life in 2000 for match-fixing.
Written by Agence France-Presse
Published: Sep 23, 2015, 07:36 PM (IST)
Edited: Sep 23, 2015, 07:38 PM (IST)


The head of world cricket’s anti-corruption body Wednesday stressed education for young players as the key to stamping out the scourge of fixing and said success should be measured by prevention — not prosecutions. Cricket has battled for years against those seeking to rig both the overall outcome of matches and specific incidents within them, known as spot-fixing. The International Cricket Council (ICC) set up its Anti-Corruption Unit in 2000 after three international captains — Hansie Cronje of South Africa, Pakistan’s Salim Malik and India’s Mohammad Azharuddin — were banned for life for match-fixing. Corruption reared its head again in 2010 when three Pakistani players were jailed and given long bans over a spot-fixing scandal in a Test against England. VIDEO: ACU chief Ronnie Flanagan stresses on educating young cricketers
With big-money Twenty20 leagues springing up around the world, attracting billions of dollars in illegal betting, the challenge remains enormous. ACU chairman Ronnie Flanagan said the ICC’s goal was not just to catch the crooks but to stop the problem at source. “The main planks of our activity are prevention, disruption and only then investigation and prosecution — in that order of priority,” said Flanagan in an interview released by the ICC.
“Education of players, particularly young players, is absolutely crucial to make them aware of the evil intent of people out there who would seek to have them drawn into their clutches and who would seek to corrupt them.” Flanagan, formerly one of Britain’s most senior police officers, said cricket’s approach was admired and imitated by other sports trying to wipe out rigging.
“We shouldn’t be judged by the number of prosecutions which have been engaged in. We should be judged by the level of prevention we are able to bring to bear, and I think that’s a very positive story,” Flanagan said. The ICC met recently to chart the next stages of its strategy, but Flanagan warned corruption could probably never be wiped out completely. READ: ICC’s Anti-Corruption Unit conducts ‘Keep Cricket Clean’ workshop
“Will ill-health ever be eradicated? Will crime ever be eradicated? And I think the frank answer has to be never totally and absolutely eradicated. But that doesn’t stop us working the very hardest that we can,” he said.
The three Pakistan players banned over the 2010 spot-fixing scandal — Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammed Amir — have completed their bans and are now free to play international cricket again. Whether they do or not is a matter for Pakistan, Flanagan said.
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“That’s not just a question of ability, that’s a question of their remorse, their realisation of how wrong their behaviour was, and their willingness to use that negative experience of theirs in education programme,” he said.