Police have made six arrests as part of an investigation into a
suspected international betting syndicate which allegedly fixed English
football matches, authorities said Wednesday.
The arrests follow an undercover investigation by Britain’s Daily Telegraph newspaper, which reported that at least three of the men held this week are footballers.
The paper said the alleged fixer who was arrested on Tuesday is “internationally known” and arrived in England last week.
The paper’s website published a covertly recorded video
in which it says the fixer claimed matches could be fixed for 50,000
pounds ($81,380).
It appears the games at risk were at levels no higher than the Football Conference the fifth tier of the sport in England.
Premier League matches are not reported to be under
investigation, and the Football League, which runs the three
professional divisions below the Premier League, said it had not been
contacted by police.
The English Football Association is working with Britain’s National Crime Agency on the investigation.
“Six men have been arrested across the country as part
of an NCA investigation into alleged football match fixing,” the NCA
said in a statement. “The focus of the operation is a suspected
international illegal betting syndicate.”
At meetings in Manchester this month, the Telegraph
said one of the alleged fixers a Singaporean man correctly predicted
how many goals would be scored during a match the next day, and offered
to manipulate two British matches this month.
The man told the paper’s investigator in a video that he would say to a footballer- “You tell me how many goals you can give.”
“Either 3-2, 4-1 or zero,” he added in broken English.
“I say I don’t need five. For me four is enough ... if more than that
up to you. But my deal is four ... I don’t want less than four.”
The alleged fixer is heard claiming he has a betting website, stressing- “We can bet (on) those goals.”
The Telegraph said it was approached by an “undercover
investigator with links to FIFA, who had been gathering evidence
against suspected Asian match fixers offering to operate in Britain.”
The alleged fixer said he was connected with Wilson Raj
Perumal, the Singaporean who was sentenced to two years in prison in
Finland in 2011 for bribing players in the Finnish football league.
“He’s my boss,” the alleged fixer in the Telegraph investigation said. “Everybody in the world know him.”
Now co-operating with authorities in Hungary, Perumal
has given evidence which is key to FIFA and law enforcement agencies
piecing together the scope of match-fixing plots worldwide carried out
by crime syndicates with Singapore connections.
Match-fixing is a growing blight in football, with
investigations across the globe raising concerns about the integrity of
the sport.
“Everyone really knew that match fixing is endemic in
football,” Chris Eaton, the former head of security for FIFA, told The
Associated Press on Thursday. “And in this (alleged) case there is
nothing new in terms of the corrupting method, its internationality or
in the core betting fraud purpose.
“What is new is that it shocks England, the home of the
game. That shock should be used to galvanize international efforts to
regulate and supervised sport betting globally, which is the real
motivation for modern match-fixing.”
The scale of the corruption in football was highlighted
earlier this year when Europol, the European Union police liaison
agency, said it reviewed 680 suspicious recent cases of match-fixing.
One of the biggest recent alleged fixing plots was
unearthed in Australia where four English players were charged in
September in a criminal investigation. Before heading to Australia to
play for the Melbourne club Southern Stars, the men played in England’s
lower leagues.
“It was only a matter of time before the English game
was caught up in this global wave of match fixing in football,” said
Eaton, who is now director of sport integrity at the International
Centre for Sport Security.
“International sport, especially football, is in serious trouble with corruption of its competitions.”
The last major match-rigging convictions in English
football were in the 1960s. Peter Swan, David ‘Bronco’ Layne and Tony
Kay, who were all in or on the fringe of the England team, were jailed
for four months and banned for life for corruption.
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