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Independent agency needed to fight match-fixing: Ex-FIFA security chief
Published in The Saudi Gazette on 01 - 12 - 2012


Brian Homewood

RIO DE JANEIRO — International sports federations need to set up an independent organization along the lines the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) to combat match-fixing, former FIFA security chief Chris Eaton has said.
Eaton, an ex-Interpol officer who is now working with the non-profit Qatar-based International Center of Sports Security (ICSS), believes more needs to be done in the way of criminal intelligence to stop match-fixers before they strike.
“You need very good intelligence and that is what sport has not really invested in,” the Australian told Reuters at the Soccerex conference in Rio de Janeiro.
“We have to focus on prevention, not just prevention by rules and regulations, but sport-related investigation under the auspices of an independent organization with some sort of global funding apparatus, a bit like WADA except that it needs to be an intelligence organization.
“It needs to be pan-sports and it needs to be global.”
Eaton, who thinks mechanisms should be set up to halt matches while they are in progress if there are firm indications of manipulation, fears his suggestion for a world anti-match-fixing body may fall on deaf ears.
“I think it should be done as soon as possible although I'm worried that it won't be because the issue is who is going to pay for this?” he added.
“That was what stalled WADA for a long time, everyone realized that doping was a big problem in sport but it took years to create WADA and only happened after governments agreed for a global conference to put some money into it.”
Eaton said that even within certain sports, there was disagreement over who was responsible for fighting match-fixing.
“It's about avoiding paying for it, because there's a significant cost to doing these things and ultimately they will have to do it anyway, so my suggestion is that the earlier they invest in this, the least it will cost them,” he remarked.
Match-fixing is often organized by illegal gambling rings who make millions of dollars by betting on the result of the games they have manipulated.
Eaton, who left his job at world soccer's governing body FIFA in February, said that gangs could influence matches in various sports by bribing players, referees or administrators.
One of the most common elements involved in bets is that five goals or more would be scored in a game.
He suggested that matches should be stopped when there was information that it had been targeted as this would stop the illegal gambling rings from making a profit.
“If you don't do that, you then find yourself engaging in a retrospective investigation while they get their money and walk away,” he said.
“We have to start a long and tedious police investigation and they've already got their 10 or 15 million dollars in their pocket, and the competition has been corrupted.”
Who carries out the investigations is another problem.
“When you have a European team playing a South East Asian team in Africa with a South American referee and this is a fixed match, who does the investigation? Is it the South Americans, is it the Europeans, it is the Africans, is it the Asians?,” Eaton asked.
His own organization, which advises governments, federations and tournament organizers among others, is already engaged in investigative work and plans to publish three-monthly reports.
“The reason we are doing it is because nobody else is doing it and if we don't do it, in our view, it's only going to get worse,” he said.
“So we're investing in looking at who is behind the criminal organizations that are operating particularly in Europe and Central America and South America.
“We're trying to put the tools in the hands (of federations), and that biggest tool is information, to tell them how those criminals operate, who they are and when they do it, so they can take some immediate action to protect their sport.” — Reuters


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