A FORMER Indian policeman with experience of tackling corruption will be the new head of the International Cricket Council’s (ICC) anti-corruption and security unit (ACSU), it was announced yesterday.
Yogendra Pal Singh, 55, takes over from Ravi Sawani, who is retiring having headed up the ACSU since November 2007, the ICC, cricket’s global governing body, said in a statement issued from their Dubai headquarters.
Singh, who is from New Delhi, spent 30 years in the Indian Police Service including several years with the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI), where he was joint-director in charge of anti-corruption.
Cricket, with its numerous in-play incidents, is particularly vulnerable to “spot-fixing” where betting stings can be arranged without having to fix the final result of the match.
And cricket’s bid to combat the problem is complicated by the fact that betting on cricket in India, the sport’s financial powerhouse, while illegal is nevertheless widespread.
ICC chief executive Haroon Lorgat, who paid tribute to the work of Sawani, said in a statement issued yesterday: “As recent events have shown, the menace of corruption in sport is real.
“But with the measures we have established over the years the public can be confident that we will make certain the integrity of the sport is maintained,” the South African added.
“We must, however, remain vigilant and YP will bring with him a fresh outlook to the continuing challenges that lie ahead.”
Sawani announced just over a year ago he intended to stand down after this year’s World Cup in the subcontinent, won by co-hosts India in Mumbai in April.
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