Thursday, September 19, 2013

Football match


Fourteen suspected members of a football match-fixing ring have been arrested in Singapore.A joint statement from the Singapore police force and the country's Corrupt Practices Investigation Bureau said 12 men and two women had been detained after an operation lasting 12 hours that targeted an organised crime ring.'Police confirm that the suspected leader and several other individuals who are the subject of ongoing investigations in other jurisdictions for match-fixing were among the persons arrested,' the statement said.


Interpol, the France-based international police co-operation organisation, commended the arrests.


'Singaporean authorities have taken an important step in cracking down on an international match-fixing syndicate by arresting the main suspects in the case,' Interpol secretary general Ronald K Noble said.The European anti-crime agency Europol said in February that a Singapore-based syndicate had directed match-fixing for at least 380 matches in Europe alone in an operation worth millions of euro.Matches were said to include Champions League ties and World Cup qualifiers.The world governing body Fifa has warned that match-fixing is threatening football on a global scale and has handed down heavy punishments to players and officials found guilty.In April three Lebanese officials were dropped from refereeing an AFC Cup match in Singapore, hours before kickoff. Referee Ali Sabbagh was jailed for six months in Singapore for accepting sexual favours to fix the game between Singapore's Tampines Rovers and India's East Bengal.Fifa issued global bans on players from Estonia and Tunisia as well as match officials from Armenia in connection with attempts to manipulate games.


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