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Biggest Match Fixers Ever in Cricket

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Biggest Match Fixers Ever in Cricket

Exclusive: Top international cricketers involved in spot-fixing
England, Australia and Pakistan cricketers involved in widespread spot-fixing, Al Jazeera investigation reveals.

by David Harrison
10 hours ago

London, England - Al Jazeera's Investigative Unithas uncovered evidence of corruption at the highest levels of international cricket.

It appears to involve two dozen fixes in 15 international matches.

The evidence, from 2011 and 2012, points to a seven of England players allegedly carrying out spot-fixes in seven matches; Australia players in five matches; Pakistan players in three, with players from other teams carrying out spot-fixes in one match. In some cases, both teams appear to have delivered a fix. Moreover, top Indian cricketers, including Rohit Sharma and Virat Kohli were photographed with the suspected match-fixer.

Spot-fixes affect just a small part of the game and do not determine the overall result.

The high-profile matches under the scanner this time include the 2011 Lord’s Test between England and India and the 2011 Cape Town Test between South Africa and Australia, along with five matches in the 2011 World Cup and three in the 2012 World T20 in Sri Lanka. The documentary also pointed out at successful spot-fixing in each of the three England-Pakistan Tests in 2012 in the UAE.

Details of at least three fixes during the 2012 World T20 held in Sri Lanka were provided by Munawar to Kalgi, which included the England-Afghanistan match.

Al Jazeera has obtained purported recordings of a match-fixer calling in the fixes to a notorious Indian bookmaker linked to the organised crime. He is unaware that the recordings were leaked. Indians involvement is maximum.


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Exclusive: Spot-fixes in 15 international cricket matches

The matches in which fixes were allegedly carried out include England versus India at Lord's Cricket Ground, South Africa versus Australia in Cape Town and several matches during England's series against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates (UAE).

The files suggest that the suspected fixes were usually carried out by batsmen who agreed to underperform. Some of the world's most famous players were batting when the fixes allegedly occurred.

Many of the matches appear to include multiple fixes, making a total of 26 fixes in the 15 matches.

Al Jazeera exposed the alleged match-fixer, Aneel Munawar, in the documentary, Cricket's Match-Fixers, which shook the sport in May 2018.

7424a1f797b6407d9d6772a42d2c123f_18.jpg

Munawar, right, speaking to Al Jazeera's David Harrison at the Taj Hotel, Mumbai, India [Al Jazeera]
Munawar is based in Mumbai but spends much of his time in Dubai. In the follow-up film, The Munawar Files, we reveal that he has been allegedly corrupting international cricket since 2010.

The matches include six Tests, six One Day Internationals and three T20 World Cup games.

We also discovered that the International Cricket Council (ICC), the sport's governing body, had known about Munawar for eight years.

Yet, the ICC issued a global appeal to find Munawar only after Al Jazeera informed them it was preparing this documentary.

Profile: Aneel Munawar
Lives: Mumbai and Dubai.


Country connections: India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, UAE, South Africa, Australia and the UK.


Role: Cricket match-fixer. Provides 25-30 rich clients with advance details of spot-fixes during domestic and international cricket matches worldwide.


Operative years: 2010-present.


Fixing targets: Test matches, One Day Internationals (ODIs), Twenty20 and high-profile cricket tournaments including: T20 World Cup, ODI World Cup, Indian Premier League, Big Bash League (Australia).


Known fixing activity: 2011 World Cup, 2012 Twenty20 World Cup, 2016/17 Australia's Big Bash, England's tour of India 2016 and Australia's tour of India of India 2016/17.


Criminal connections: D-company's match-fixing and betting syndicates run by founder Dawood Ibrahim; Sonu Jalan, a "Kingpin bookie" from Mumbai; Dubai-based bookmaker Dinesh Khambhat alias DK and former Ahmedabad-based bookmaker Dinesh Kalgi (died 2014).

Twenty-five of the 26 predictions made by Munawar proved to be correct.

A UK-based firm of sports betting analysts said the odds of Munawar accurately predicting 25 of the 26 outcomes without fixing them were 9.2 million to one.

In the recordings, Munawar uses the same methods and language that he used during our undercover investigation in 2016 and 2017, when he gave advance details about alleged fixes in two Test matches in India.

00de7aab1b114480b51c4497028164fc_18.jpg

India's Virat Kohli with Munawar [The player depicted is not implicated in any wrongdoing/Al Jazeera]
His predictions were accurate in both cases.

Our dossier also includes photographs of Munawar and his associates hovering near, and purportedly talking to, international cricket players during the T20 World Cup in Sri Lanka in 2012.

There is no suggestion that these players were involved in match-fixing.

Among the players the match-fixer was seen close to is Virat Kohli, now India's captain and widely regarded as the world's best cricket player.

Other photographs show Umar Akmal, a Pakistani player, receiving and peering into a bag allegedly given to him by a Munawar associate, though the photographs do not show whether Akmal left with the bag.

cefd202d7e17457e999f24a2ac279c40_18.jpg

Rohit Sharma with Munawar [The player depicted is not implicated in any wrongdoing/Al Jazeera]
Others who appear in the photographs include Andy Bichel, the Australian coach, and senior Indian players including Suresh Raina, Rohit Sharma and Lakshmipathy Balaji.

The ICC claims to have "spotters" at international tournaments to protect players from match-fixers.

The Munawar Files also include a recording of a call allegedly made by Munawar to an unnamed English cricketer, in which they appear to discuss spot-fixing. Munawar could be heard saying he is sending money to the player's account.

A forensic speech scientist has examined the recording and concluded that it had not been tampered with.

The player believed to be speaking with Munawar denied that the conversation took place and suggested the recording was a fabrication.

de4f23a9ac0c4fc98b31969eca563c74_18.jpg

Pakistan's Umar Akmal, right, pictured with a Munawar associate. The player depicted is not implicated in any wrongdoing [Al Jazeera]
In the new documentary, Munawar's identity and match-fixing role is confirmed by a man who worked for the Indian bookmaker, and received and recorded Munawar's calls about the fixes.

Munawar's role is further confirmed by a senior Indian detective who arrested Sonu Jalan, an alleged high-profile criminal, days after the first Al Jazeera documentary was broadcast.

Pradeep Sharma, who fights organised crime in a Mumbai suburb, said Jalan had told officers that he knew Munawar.

0d08d4952a0749e189e9d4955943bea3_18.jpg

Senior Inspector Pradeep Sharma, Thane police [Screengrab from Al Jazeera interview]
"He had met him in Dubai," Sharma said. "He also informed us that he is connected to the D-Company. He looks after the betting syndicate of the D-Company."


D-Company is a powerful South Asian mafia that operates out of Pakistan, India and Dubai, and is believed to be heavily involved in match-fixing.

Lawyers for the England and Australia teams rejected Al Jazeera's evidence, while the ICC did not respond to questions about Munawar.

The latest film, Cricket's Match Fixers: The Munawar Files, is available online and can be viewed on Al Jazeera at the following times:

Sunday, October 21 - 20:00 GMT

Monday, October 22 - 06:00 GMT

Tuesday, October 23 - 01:00 GMT

Wednesday, October 24 - 12:00 GMT

Thursday, October 25 - 06:00 GMT

Friday, October 26 - 01:00 GMT

Saturday, October 27 - 20:00 GMT

Sunday, October 28 - 12:00 GMT

SOURCE: AL JAZEERA NEWS

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Nothing will happen this time because the Indians are involved in it. Whenever it comes to Indians, the ICC just sweeps it under the carpet.
 
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Nothing will happen this time because the Indians are involved in it. Whenever it comes to Indians, the ICC just sweeps it under the carpet.

Apart from the bookie himself, where was it mentioned that any Indian was involved? Don't mention the pics, both Rohit Sharma and Kohli will have 1000s of such pics with 1000s of fans.
 
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