Jakarta Globe – AFP, Jun 16, 2014
Singapore.
Singapore authorities last year placed leaders of a global match-fixing ring
operating from the city-state in indefinite detention after uncovering plans to
rig the World Cup, claims a new book released on Monday.
Written by
Zaihan Mohamed Yusof, a Singaporean investigative journalist who has reported
extensively on football match-fixing, the book details how he learnt of the
now-crippled gang’s plans from senior government officials and a prominent
sports corruption investigator.
“The
syndicate had been posturing, setting up a base of corrupt football players and
officials through matches played overseas in national leagues and international
friendlies,” Zaihan quoted one senior unnamed Singapore government official as
saying in “Foul! The Inside Story of Singapore Match Fixers”.
“When the
2014 World Cup comes, all they will be doing is collecting [their betting
earnings],” the official said of the tournament, which kicked off in Brazil
last week.
“Something
had to be done to stop them … We couldn’t take the chance,” another official
was quoted as saying by Zaihan, a journalist with Singapore’s The New Paper.
Zaihan also
quoted Michael Pride, head of operations at Australia-based match-fixing
investigators SI Sports Intelligence as saying “this syndicate allegedly sets
up fixes six months ahead of major matches.
“From
source information, they were allegedly gearing up for the World Cup,” Pride
said.
The
city-state’s police and anti-corruption agency in September last year rounded
up 14 alleged members of a global match-fixing syndicate, in one of the biggest
crackdowns yet on corruption in football.
Singapore
subsequently used a special law that allows indefinite detention to hold four
key ring leaders of the group, including alleged kingpin Dan Tan, also known as
Tan Seet Eng.
Officials
say the indefinite detention is necessary because witnesses fear reprisals if
they testify in court.
Tan, a
reclusive Singaporean businessman, first came into prominence when fixer Wilson
Raj Perumal, also a Singaporean, was arrested and jailed in Finland in 2011 for
fixing top-tier games there.
Perumal had
told prosecutors in Finland he was a double-crossed associate of Tan, who has
also been named in several European match-fixing investigations.
Interpol
has said that the ring busted in Singapore was the world’s “largest and most
aggressive match-fixing syndicate, with tentacles reaching every continent”.
Experts
have said that easy international transport, a passport accepted around the
world and fluency in English and Mandarin have helped Singaporean fixers spread
their influence abroad with the support of external investors, most believed to
be from China.
Sports
betting is deeply entrenched in the wealthy city-state, with top European
league matches the most favoured among punters. Experts say there are dozens of
illegal betting outfits in Singapore.
In May, the
Doha-based watchdog group International Centre for Sport Security warned in a
report that Asian-dominated criminal groups are laundering more than $140
billion of illegal sports betting, mainly on football.
Agence France-Presse

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