Posts Tagged ‘singapore’

Be afraid. Be very afraid.

Monday, March 18th, 2013

The Doha Summit on Sports Security is going on now.

 

Do not believe a syllable of anything that emerges from that meeting.  Trust very few of the people who are speaking there.   What you are witnessing is an extraordinary and costly charade.

 

There is a superb line in the film by John Sayles Eight Men Out about the fixing at the World Series of Baseball in 1919 that explains, in general, what is going on in Doha.   In the film, one of the characters says, after an investigative journalist has revealed that there was fixing in the World Series and all of the United States has been scandalized by the corruption: 

 

“There is a parade forming to clean up baseball and the league wants to get to the head of the parade and makes sure it chooses where that parade goes.”

What we see in Doha is the sports world doing the same thing. 

 

It is very difficult to find a sports fan anywhere in the world who does not think that the idea of a World Cup in Qatar in 2022 is ridiculous and that someone, somewhere bought that tournament.

One of the former senior executives of Qatari sport and world soccer – Mohammed bin Hammam– is under investigation for openly offering bribes to get himself elected to the presidency of FIFA.  

 

Now, we have the same country – Qatar – proposing it lead the fight against corruption in sport.

 

Sure, it will. 

 

Are there some honest people there?  Yes. Will there be lots of strong-sounding words and firm resolutions coming out of the Doha conference? Yes.

 

But will there be any investigation of ay possible irregularities of the Qatar World Cup bid of 2022? Nope.

 

Will anyone dare mention the words Mohammed bin Hammam and bribery investigation in the same sentence?Nope.

 

Will there be a single useful plan of action coming out of Doha to properly fight sports corruption?
Nope.

 

Let us move to the real situation in match fixing.  Here is the headline:

 

Nothing has changed. 

 

The man – Dan Tan – wanted by European police for fixing football matches across five continents – is still free. 

There is an enormous media campaign by Singaporean authorities, Interpol and FIFA to convince you that something has changed.  Nothing has changed.

 

The arrest clock is still ticking.   On November 28, 2012 – Ron Noble, the head of Interpol declared that there would be ‘arrests imminently in Singapore’.  We are still waiting. (And no, the arrest of Admir Suljic by Italian police does not count).

Remember these two essential factors:

 

1)    Dan Tan is still free.

 

2)    A number of national and international organizations (FIFA, Singapore Government, Interpol)  are trying their best to persuade you that something has changed.

 

Understand those two factors and you understand much about the situation that we face in fighting match-fixing in international sport.  Widespread fixing exists and the bodies tasked with fighting it are spending enormous resources and ingenuity not in arresting the people who are alleged to have done it, but by pretending to fight it.   This week’s conference in Doha is another example of the fake fight.

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The Interrogation of Dan Tan

Tuesday, February 26th, 2013

Thanks to my contacts in Singapore’s law enforcement community (CPIB and the Police), I can bring you the following exclusive transcript of last weekend’s interrogation of Dan Tan:

 

Scene:              A cell inside Singapore police headquarters.   Long table.  Two policemen in crisp, white shirts on one side of the table.  Across from them sits the charming (and Dan Tan is many things if not charming) and intelligent Dan Tan.  The atmosphere is tense.

 

Policeman 1:             Okay, la. I want to bet on games in Serie A.  Do you know any good fixes that I can make some money on?

 

Dan Tan:            Hmm, let me see, la.   Okay. Last game of the season in Serie A, usually a lot of fixes, la.  So make sure you bet on the rich teams not to go to down to Serie B – you know their second division.   Same thing in that division, lot of rich teams pay for the results to go up to Serie A.

 

Policeman 2: (Slams table with fist)  Are you kidding me?  It is Italy!  Look, la, in Italy, everyone knows those games are fixed.  Newspapers announce the scores before the games are played!  Stop fucking around and give us good gambling tips or you will be in trouble, la.

 

Dan Tan:              Okay.  Why you look so much at Italy?  Go Germany. Take Bayern Munich above the spread.  No fixing, but good gambling.  The bookies will make you try to forget, but go long-term with the favourites. Make money, la!

 

Policeman 1:            Good idea.  I like this plan.

 

(3-hour conversation follows on successful betting strategies for sports gambling.  Finally…)

 

Policeman 2:            Okay, good talk. I like this, Mr. Tan. You got good ideas.   But if we arrest you and send you to Italy, you won’t tell them about X, Y and Z? (Names three well-known former Singaporean national team players who most people on the island think have been involved in fixing for years, but no one wants to arrest as they are so popular).

 

Dan Tan:            Don’t know what you are talking about.

 

Policeman 1:            Very good, la.  Okay.  If you don’t say anything about certain people in the Singaporean or Indonesian businesses community we can make a deal.  You do time in Italy, then come back here, eat good food, family still here – no problem!

 

Dan Tan:            Don’t know what you are talking about.

 

Policeman 1 & 2:  (laughing) Very good!  We like you.  We can do business, la!

 

**

 

Do not understand the cultural references?   Check out the blog post below.   And remember Dan Tan’s alleged activities have surprised only the naïve in Singapore’s law enforcement. There is a reason why he was not arrested before the arrest warrant from Interpol.  There is a reason why he was not arrested after the arrest warrant from Interpol.  There is a reason why he still has not been arrested.  Understand that reason (and it is in the fictional transcript above) and you understand the story of Dan Tan and all of the international match-fixing scandals.

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Assisting is Not Arresting

Thursday, February 21st, 2013

So Dan Tan is now helping authorities with the investigation.

A press release from the Singaporean Police announced a few hours ago,

“Dan Tan Seet Eng, a Singaporean who has been named in reports so far, is currently assisting Singapore authorities in their investigations.”

Fair play.  This is a good start.  Months late.  But fair enough someone in Singapore, after immense international pressure, has stepped up to the mark and started a process that should have been done a long time ago.

Here then are a few questions and background notes for Singaporean authorities:

1)    Why have you not arrested him?  [There is enough evidence from Italy, to arrest this suspect, rather than extradite him, particularly as many of his actions were alleged to have taken place in Singapore]

2)    Have you searched his home? [This is where the physical evidence that may lead to other suspects is found].

3)    Have you taken away his computer, mobile phone? [See above].

4)    Why has it taken you so long to approach him? [See all of my previous blogs]

5)    What concrete steps will Singaporean authorities do to demonstrate that they can be trusted? [Given your spotty record on arresting well-wanted match-fixing suspects, why would any credible policeman trust you with confidential information?  Interpol now has four Singaporean police officers helping with their match-fixing unit. Few serious European police officers will trust them, how are they going to change that situation?]

6)  Is this all stage-managed?   If not, why did you wait for the AFC/Interpol Match-Fixing Conference to announce the arrests of suspects? Was it all coincidence or was the timing suspiciously close to when the world’s media would be paying attention? 

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A Sidekick Over the Ship

Thursday, February 21st, 2013

A quick comment on the arrest of Admir Suljic arrest. 

This is called throwing the sidekick over the side of the ship.

It is a tactic used to distract the media from the real person: Dan Tan.

Again, Dan Tan is alleged to be at the centre of the match-fixing ring.  If true, he knows the key establishment people who would be involved in helping their activities. A man like Admir Suljic does not know those people.
 
There is an odd, ironic convergence of interests that is occurring.  

-Dan Tan does not want to be arrested.

-The Singaporean government does not want the embarrassment of having a domestic scandal when it is revealed which prominent people in the Asian sporting and business world are involved in fixing.

-Interpol does not want Europol stealing all the glory and getting the credit for fighting against fixing.

The three sides, without speaking to each other, are putting on a show for the international media.

Do not believe them. 

Keep asking for Dan Tan’s arrest.  Remember his people came to your country and fixed your sports.   They are now helping cover it up.  We can stop this from happening.  Just arrest Dan Tan.

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The Red Flags of Malarkey

Monday, February 18th, 2013

In life, there are certain phrases that mean the exact opposite to their stated meaning. For example, the term “world-class” usually means that something is parochial, petty and provincial.  You do not see signs in Paris or Rome advertising “world-class” projects, but you do in just about every small-town across the globe.  “Centre of excellence” (mediocre and deeply unoriginal) is another term, but the best is when someone looks you in the eye and says, “I am going to be completely honest with you.”   This usually means that the malarkey is just about to start, however, thanks to their sub-conscious,  a large red-flag has been raised to warn you that they are now going to start talking nonsense.

 

The AFC/Interpol Conference against Match-Fixing is about to start in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.  Given both of these organizations failure to act credibly against sports corruption it will be, unless there is a dramatic change in their operations, a sham, a farce and perilously close to a cover-up.   There will, presumably, be lots of flags flying outside the conference centre, but as a public service, here is a list of some of the red-flags of malarkey that you may hear at the conference.  These are the signals that will be hoisted just before someone starts to talk nonsense.

 

1) The Arrest Clock –  First of all, as a public service here is a tool to give accountability to some of the malarkey statements.   On Wednesday, November 28th, 2012, the Head of Interpol Ron Noble announced in Singapore that there would a series of imminent arrests of match-fixers in that jurisdiction.  Now if you are like me, you might think imminent arrest means that the police cars are warming up their sirens, the officers are buckling on their swat jackets and the gang of fixers are frantically running through their apartments trying to destroy as much evidence as possible.

 

However, in the Interpol–Singapore Gangnam Style of policing imminent arrests means that the prospective criminals get to flush any incriminating evidence down the toilet, destroy their hard-drives, throw away their mobile phones, vacuum their apartments, do the washing up, cook their wives dinner, pick the kids up from school, go to the casino, take a holiday, maybe fix a few more matches to keep their hands in.  You know – imminent arrests.

 

Therefore, I have instituted the “Very Official Interpol/Singapore ‘Arrest Clock’” to see how long it takes the Singaporeans to get out from behind their desks and actually arrest an internationally wanted match-fixer in an imminent manner. 

 

To this date, it has been twelve-weeks since the fixers in Singapore received a loud, clear and unmistakable signal to destroy any proof of their activities, but possibly, they may need some more time. The VOISAC (police bureaucrats loves acronyms!) measures clearly the time it takes to imminently arrest them.   For any journalists attending the conference, just refer to the clock when you hear any official statement, if they have not made the ‘imminent arrests’ what credibility do they have for any new measures?

 

2) Operation SOCA – it is a sign of the inexperience and naivety of many of the other journalists covering this story that they give Interpol any credibility for this police action.  In fact, if you see a reporter citing Operation SOCA in their articles, you can immediately dismiss their work as a mixture of fantasy and raw credulity.   If you see any Interpol or AFC official citing this operation in a presentation, you can do likewise.

 

For the uninitiated, Operation SOCA is a joke.  It is shadow puppet theatre. It is law enforcement by and for media relations.   What happens every year is that Asian police forces go out and arrest a bunch of street gamblers.  Often these operations are conducted with the help of the top-bookmakers.   The officials then make a series of po-faced announcements where they say things like, “a serious blow against sports corruption” or “an unrelenting battle against the King-pins of Fixing”.   At the Interpol conferences, Operation SOCA gets brought up repeatedly.  It is a joke and should be treated as such.

 

Don’t believe me?  Take the word of Joe Pistone a.k.a. Donnie Brasco – one of the best undercover cops of the FBI.   Here is his perspective, when I described police actions against gambling in Asia:

 

“Right, and they make a bust. I mean, that happens here in the States too. They make a bust and they arrest some nobodies, so it looks like they’re doing something. I mean, that’s the old game, that’s not something new…

“It keeps the newspapers happy, it keeps the people happy, you know, the citizens happy, that, you know, the police are doing something. Somebody gets arrested. You know, somebody of no consequence. And they make sure that there’s not that much money there at the time. I mean, that’s not a new game. That game’s been around forever.”

 

To understand, say the following mantra – ‘Gambling is not fixing. Gambling is not fixing. Gambling is not fixing.’  What they are doing in Operation SOCA is arresting a lot of lowly bettors who have no more to do with fixing than the office pool on the Super Bowl or the World Cup does with organized crime. Police forces have to make these operations periodically against things like prostitution to keep up their media image.

 

3)            Interpol’s Arrest Warrant for Dan Tan: To repeat, Dan Tan is an internationally-wanted alleged match-fixer living in Singapore.  There is a mountain of legal evidence against him for his activities in numerous countries.  

 

There’s an Interpol international arrest warrant, but Interpol is – now – trying to spin that the arrest warrant they served as not really an ‘arrest warrant’ it was more like an international parking summons, well, actually more like an international parking ticket, that governments and suspects can ignore if they do not want to pay the fine.  Please!  This is spin.   Poor old Interpol is in a crisis of credibility over their entire campaign against match-fixing.  Bless them, but take their statements with the seriousness they deserve.

There will be other red-flags of malarkey flying over the AFC-Interpol Conference (“match-fixing is a long, complicated war that will never be solved” etc) but these should help any sports official or journalist when the obvious nonsense is being spun.

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A Quick Primer

Monday, February 18th, 2013

There is an international match fixer living in Singapore who has, according to numerous different European police agencies helped fix hundreds of football matches around the world.

Interpol has issued an international arrest warrant for him. The Singaporean government has responded by giving them, FIFA, European police investigators and the international sporting community the finger.

They have given the finger in true-Singaporean fashion – lots of flabby excuses and illogical media statements – but basically they have told Interpol/FIFA where it can put its warrants.

Strangely, Interpol and FIFA have taken this crap from the Singaporeans.

Instead of standing up to them, they are engaged in a monstrous media spin campaign to convince journalists that:

i)    The problem is serious and they are right on top of it.

ii)   The problem is not that serious, but they are still right on top of it.

iii) The problem is serious and the Singaporean police are helping them out, not by actually arresting any internationally wanted criminals who live in Singapore, but by coming to visit Interpol and having a series of meetings with them.

iv) Besides, why is everyone so hung up on this ‘arresting people’ thing?  An international police agency is more like an educational institution where you tour the world convincing people of the dangers of the illicit drug trade – and look how successful Interpol has been in stopping all the drug-dealers!

v)   Err, that is it, until that troublesome Canadian journalist says something else…

Here then is a quick primer of situation over the last couple of weeks.   It is an adaptation of an interview with the superb football journalist Jerrad Peters at the ‘Bleacher Report’ site.

B/R: What did the Europol press conference tell us?

DH: We know that there have been at least 360 matches that are considered to have been fixed in the last couple seasons in European football. What we didn’t know going into that press conference was that there were 300 matches in Asia, Latin America and Africa that were also suspicious, and what was truly shocking about that number is that at least 150 of them were national team matches.

For example, Zimbabwe vs. Malaysia, or games at that level. There aren’t that many games at that level, so 150 of them—that’s a pretty high proportion. It’s about one a week. If I were a jam-making factory and between one and five percent of my product was toxic, you’d better hope I was going to be closed down. 

B/R: Sepp Blatter claimed that many of the matches in question had already been “dealt with” by both FIFA and the authorities. Is this an accurate claim?

DH: To say that all those cases in Asia, Latin American and Africa have been dealt with is disingenuous at best. For FIFA to pretend that this is being dealt with an international level is outrageous, because it speaks to the very governance of football. We’re talking about one to five percent of the games that happen every week under the direct watch of FIFA being fixed.

B/R: What’s the first thing FIFA should do if they’re serious about tackling this problem?

DH: Somebody at FIFA has to stand up and say, “You know what, Singapore? We don’t like this. Your people are going around the world fixing matches in our countries.”

Just say, “Look, we think you should sit out the next international tournament; we think you should sit out the World Cup and the Olympics.”

It would send a clear message to Singapore: “Hey guys, we’re not having your garbage. You’re dumping a bunch of garbage into our sport, and we’re serious about cleaning it up. And you know what? Banning you doesn’t cost any money; it’s not complicated. What we’ll do is we’ll put this ban into place for the next two years. And if you arrest [the fixers] and put into place the sort of measures that show us you’re serious about cleaning up match fixing in your jurisdiction—fine, come back. But if you’re not, we just don’t want you.”

That’s what has to be done. It’s cheap, it’s easy and it’s very simple to do.

B/R: And the broader authorities?

DH: We’re at a very rare case where we can sum everything up in one sentence. And that sentence is, “Dan Tan must be arrested.”

B/R: Who is Dan Tan?

DH: Dan Tan is an international match-fixer who is alleged to have fixed matches in dozens of different countries.  Some Italian media claim that he is “the No. 1 wanted man in Italy.”  Think about all the mob people in Italy – the Mafia, the Camorra, the ‘Ndrangheta – and the Italian media is calling him “the No. 1 wanted man in Italy.” That’s a huge thing. That’s really, really big.

There’s an Interpol international arrest warrant, but Interpol is clearly not interested in pushing the Singaporean government to serve that arrest warrant. The Singaporean government has basically given the finger to Interpol and FIFA and the international community and made up a bunch of excuses as to why they’re not serving it.

 Note:   Interpol is – now – trying to spin that the arrest warrant they served was not really an ‘arrest warrant’ it was more like an international parking summons, well, actually more like an international parking ticket, that governments and suspects can ignore if they do not want to pay the fine.  Please!  This is spin.   Poor old Interpol is in a crisis of credibility over their entire campaign against match-fixing.  Bless them, but take their statements with the seriousness they deserve.

B/R: Is Dan Tan where the problem begins, or are there others like him, or even more powerful than him?

DH: He’s a broker. There are people much more powerful than he is.  Look, you can’t have that many matches being fixed without international officials being involved.

Let’s be really clear here: I’m not talking about Sepp Blatter and the guys in Zurich. I don’t think they’re fixing matches. I really don’t. They don’t need that. But I do think there are presidents and senior executives of national football associations—i.e. the guys who vote for Blatter—who are fixing.

And I think if we were to put Dan Tan on trial in a neutral location, promise him a protection deal, do the stuff we have to do to get a fair testimony…and if he told everything he knew, it would shake world soccer. It would be a huge scandal, but we would do an immense amount of good toward cleaning up the problem, and then we would move on.

He’s the centre of a network, he knows lots of people. And if you get him you could get lots of other people. You could set fixing back three to five years in which time leagues around the world could put into place all sorts of really good, sensible measures that wouldn’t cost all that much money, and you could make fixing a small side issue.

B/R: What are we risking if match fixing is allowed to continue unchecked?

DH: If we don’t arrest Dan Tan, you can just give up the game within five to ten years. Just give up. Because if we don’t arrest him it means the people we have tasked with dealing with this issue have with doing this have failed, that they’re deliberately complicit with failure. If fixing is tolerated, why would you bother? Why would you bother paying attention to this game?

What Interpol and FIFA, and now sadly UEFA, are doing is they’re getting caught up in this battle for credibility instead of rolling up their sleeves and saying, “My goodness, Dan Tan must be arrested. We’re going to put all our efforts into doing that.”

But if they can’t even arrest a man who has hundreds of pages of evidence against him, forget it.

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Breaking Stories and the Singapore Media

Monday, February 11th, 2013

To start – I broke the story.   I have been stating publicly since September 2008 that there is a group of Asian based match-fixers who travel the world arranging football matches with local criminals.

 

For regular readers of this blog or my book The Fix, this is obvious.  But in a week filled with vindication and support after the Europol press conference, there is a strain in the media of a very small number of journalists who are claiming that they were the people to break the story of Asian criminals fixing matches around the world.

 

It is tiresome. The original investigation was dangerous. The shepherding of the book through copious legal readings was onerous.  The media criticism when The Fix came out was difficult.

 

After I broke the story, there have been lots of other journalists who have done excellent work.  However, none of the people who now claim to have broken the story was there for any of those steps.  To try to take credit, now that the story has been validated, is neither fair nor honourable.

 

Far, far more importantly – their claims are also untruthful.  And in making these false statements they seriously skew the story and help hide many key issues.  

 

For example, there is an underlying question that no one has examined.   How was it possible that an independent Canadian journalist working as a doctoral student at the University of Oxford was able to break one of the most important sports stories of our generation?   I was, after all, working mostly in Singapore.  Why did the local journalists not break this story?  Why was an outsider, with almost no resources, able to come in and get the story?  

 

It seems like a head-scratcher.   Singaporean journalists (and I am speaking of Singaporeans, not international journalists who live there) speak far better Hakka Chinese or Tamil than me: they work for big media conglomerates: it is their patch, they should have lots of local contacts – so why did it take an outsider to beat them to their own story? 

 

In fact, why are most of the Singaporean media (there are some honourable exceptions) still publishing complete nonsense when it comes to this story: “the reputation of Singapore tarnished”, “the accusations based on the words of convicted match-fixer”, “Singapore police helping Interpol” -  yaddah-yaddah, yaddah-yaddee, more government sponsored BS.

 

The clue comes in the treatment of the two Malaysian journalists mostly responsible for the breaking of the Kelong scandal in 1994: Johnson Fernandez and Lazarus Rokk.   They ended up with replica bullets being placed on their desks.   Note – these fake bullets were not sent to them in the mail or at their houses, but they showed up on their desks at work. In other words, someone inside their own organization was presumably connected with the fixers.

 

This is the true situation in Asia.   The networks of sports corruption run very deep.

It is the same for Singaporean journalists. I did not meet a single journalist who did not know what was going on.    You cannot go for a drink with them without the long list of the ‘who-is-who’ of Singaporean sports personalities being metaphorically taken out and fixing allegations against each of them being discussed.  Former national team players, influential coaches and prominent club owners are all rumoured to be on the fix.   I do not know the truth of the specific stories, but if a tenth of them were true, Singapore would have a huge problem. 

 

This is another strong reason why we have seen the Singaporean establishment dig its heels in and refuse to arrest one of their prominent alleged fixers.   Singapore is like 17th century Salem, Massachusetts meets 21st century Las Vegas, Nevada: a veneer of public Puritanism trying to hide a gambling obsession.

 

If Dan Tan were immediately arrested and extradited to a neutral country, he may be able to reveal a number of prominent people both inside and outside the Singaporean sports world who worked with the fixers.  If Dan Tan were immediately arrested he would expose this seamy nexus that is purported to exist inside Singaporean society.   However, until Dan Tan is arrested, stand-by for more government-sponsored nonsense from the Singaporean media and more self-aggrandizing claims from too-late journalists.

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It Ain’t Complicated!

Friday, February 8th, 2013

Anyone who tells you that match-fixing is complicated to solve is either ignorant or lying.

 

Following the Europol press conference and the media hype around it  – let us analyse the current fixing situation in international football:

 

It is very, very simple.

Let us take out ‘football’ for the moment and imagine that we are speaking about bank robberies.

 

There is a gang that is going around the world and robbing banks.  They have stolen money from at least 680 banks in over-20 different countries.

 

We know the name of the alleged leader of the gang.

 

We know the address of the alleged leader of the gang.

 

We know his birth date and his phone number.

 

Police forces in some of those countries have collected hundreds of pages of evidence against him.

 

The police forces have gone to the country where he lives with an international arrest warrant and asked the government of that country to arrest him.

 

His national government has refused to arrest him.

 

They have come up with a variety of responses, ‘not enough evidence’, ‘warrant not valid’, ‘we are helping [but not enough to make any arrests]’, etc…  But basically, they are refusing to act.

 

It is that simple.  

 

Dan Seet Eng Tan is that man.  Interpol, FIFA, UEFA dare not mention his name or even publicly ask Singapore to arrest him. 

 

The Singaporeans are giving them the finger.  [Translation for international readers, the Singaporean government is telling the international sporting community to ‘F*** off’’ – and the international sporting community is accepting it.]

 

This is the situation: do not let anyone tell you any different.  

 

The international response to this refusal is very clear.  Instead of putting pressure on the Singaporean government.   All the sports officials and the international police force says, ‘We should train the bank tellers!’

 

Quite why large international institutions are afraid of offending the Singaporeans is beyond me.  Singapore is a pretty tetchy country in the sporting world. It is a nice place, full of very good people whom I greatly like  – but still in sporting terms, if you told the Singaporeans that they were not welcome at the Olympics because they were harbouring internationally wanted criminals who were accused of destroying sport – few people would notice their absence.

 

 

**

 

Another note – Sepp Blatter has come out this week saying that most of the 680-cases of fixing announced at the Europol press conference ‘have been dealt with’.

 

Really?

 

When?

 

There must have been a huge scandal that I missed. Because I have never seen a FIFA-wide investigation into hundreds of international matches being fixed.   These matches are the one that FIFA organizes.    This is a fair proportion of the total number of matches that FIFA is directly responsible for.   

The real mystery is when Blatter banned the national football officials who were helping the fixers.   I must have missed that story as well. 

 

Because if he is saying that a gang of match-fixers arranged hundreds of international FIFA-organized matches, without the help of someone inside the sport that would be very difficult indeed. 

 

Still if Mr. Blatter said that all these fixed matches have been dealt with and all the people caught. We will have to believe him, because Mr. Blatter has such a good reputation. 

 

The thought that there might be all those international fixed matches and no one has examined them is too much.

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Europol Press Conference is a Huge, New Story

Wednesday, February 6th, 2013

Stay Tuned – I will be releasing fresh revelations later this week.

However, for now, here is a quick fact sheet for people interested in the story developing around the Europol press conference on Monday of this week. At the conference, police investigators announced that they had over 400-suspects and over 680 suspicious matches.

Most journalists have played the story straight and simply announced these findings, however, there has been a strain in the media that is trying frantically to downplay the findings at the press conference. Their most frequent accusation is that the police did not ‘present anything new’ or ‘they did not consult sports officials and these sporting authorities are furious’.

So here is a quick outline of the true situation and the underlying factors at play:

Is this a new story?

Damn straight it is. Do not listen to the nonsense being peddled out in the media that ‘this is an old story’.

That line is a classic news-burying job.

This is because it ignores the fundamental question: ‘Is the story true?’

That question is more than answered – we know is that there have been confirmed and widespread fixing of matches in the following countries:

Turkey, Greece, Italy, Macedonia, Montenegro. Serbia, Croatia, Hungary, Poland, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Germany, Belgium, Austria, Finland, South Korea, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Guatemala and Canada.

Those twenty countries I have just pulled off the top of my head. There are many other cases in other countries.

This is not rumour. We are not speaking about winks from players from Dynamo Zagreb against Olympique de Lyon.

Note that we are speaking about convictions in a judicial court where a judge has banged a gavel and said, ‘This game was fixed.’

Two, there was new material at the Europol press conference. One of the investigators said that they had evidence that up to 150 international matches had been fixed in two years in Asia, Africa and Latin America. He stated that these were national teams playing against each other.

This is a huge story.

There are not that many international matches on that level (national teams). 150 games is a significant proportion of the total matches played over two years. Essentially, that means more than one international match a week is being fixed.

This is a serious governance issue on the part of the organizers FIFA of these types of games. The question that few journalists are asking is given this news – what specific measures has FIFA undertaken to stop these kind of games being fixed? And I do not mean holding another international conference on match-fixing.

Three, for the first time an official body – Europol – has stood up and said this activity is connected to a group coming out of Singapore.

Look, I know that people who read my book and this blog, that is an old story. But over the years there have been few officials who have had the guts to say it loudly and clearly in public.

Why is there a media spin that this is an old story?

There are two camps in the anti-match-fixing industry. One camp centred on FIFA and Interpol are happy to say a lot, but do nothing. They will make motherhood statements about how bad fixing is, but will not take any concrete action.

As you know, I exposed that Interpol is unwilling to put pressure on the Singaporean government to fulfil an international arrest warrant served by Interpol against a Singaporean accused of match-fixing by European police.

The spin comes mostly, although not exclusively, from their chums in the media trying to downplay the activities of the other camp.

This second camp in the fight against match-fixing are the police investigators who have actually done excellent work against the fixers. They have made arrests. They have got convictions. They are on their way to actually taking concrete steps against the people who are corrupting the sport.

Sadly, they have not been aided by many sports officials.

More to come, stay tuned.

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Another ‘I Told You So’ Moment

Monday, February 4th, 2013

Europol Press Conference on Match-Fixing

First, the good news.  This is good news!  Forget the ‘black day for European Football’ comments.  Fixing and corruption has been going on in football for a long time.  Long before ‘The Fix’ revealed the existence of this network, these fixers have been working throughout the sport to destroy its credibility.   Finally, there are serious, good police investigators taking a long, hard and critical look at the dark centre of the sport. 

Second, what is surprising is not specific matches, but the sheer scale of the number of matches fixed.  Forget the stuff about Champions League or games in the UK.  The important point was that Europol estimates that 150 international matches in Asia, Africa and Latin America were fixed in two years.  Note – these are not club matches, but games between national teams. 150 of these types of matches in two years is a fair proportion of the total number of all international matches of this type.   If I were a football fan in any of those continents I would be furious with my national football authorities for allowing such a high-level of corruption to exist.  I would also be asking which football officials knew what and when – to pretend that someone inside the football world did not know about this level of corruption is unbelievable.

Three, the absolutely important point is that we know what is going on and who is responsible.  Asian criminals have been traveling all over the world fixing sports in our countries.   These are not ‘mysterious’, ‘unknown’ people.  The alleged ringleaders are very well-known.  If you have read my last blogs you know that the Singaporean government has refused to arrest one of the alleged chiefs of the fixers.   It is time to consider banning Singapore from international football until they honour an Interpol arrest warrant and arrest one of their own.

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