• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Singapore calls for "concrete evidence" in game-fixing probe

Suspicion

Alfrescian
Loyal

Singapore calls for "concrete evidence" in game-fixing probe
Posted: 07 February 2013 1257 hrs

display_image.php


(AFP/File - Giuseppe Cacace)

SINGAPORE: Singapore police said on Thursday they needed hard evidence to crack down on match-fixing cartels, after coming under pressure to arrest suspected ringleaders of networks which targeted hundreds of football games in Europe and beyond.

Police said authorities had supplied information about Dan Tan Seet Eng, a key suspect who is wanted by investigators in Rome, and that they were working with Europol following revelations that Singapore-linked networks rigged or tried to rig 680 games worldwide.

"The authorities in Singapore are assisting the Italian authorities through Interpol in their investigations into an international match-fixing syndicate that purportedly involves a Singaporean, Dan Tan Seet Eng," police told AFP in an email.

In a separate statement, police said they were seeking more information from Europol, which detailed its findings this week after a major investigation, and that they were working with authorities in several countries.

"Syndicated match-fixing is a complex global problem that can only be effectively eradicated if all countries work together to combat the scourge," the Singapore police said.

"This requires law enforcement agencies to proactively share information and intelligence so that concrete evidence can be gathered to support enforcement actions on the ground."

Europol said some 380 of the games were in Europe, and included Champions League ties, World Cup and European Champions qualifiers, and top-flight fixtures from around the continent, linking the conspiracy to ringleaders in Singapore.

Dan Tan is the subject of an Italian arrest warrant and reports say he has been accused in German court documents, and named in investigations in several countries. He is suspected of being one of about five Singaporean ringleaders.

Singapore has come under pressure to explain why key suspects such as Dan Tan remain at large, with Interpol secretary Ronald Noble telling the Straits Times newspaper that the country's "reputation would continue to suffer" until arrests are made.

Singapore's Wilson Raj Perumal, who claims to be an ex-associate of Dan Tan, is believed to have been a key informant for the European probe and the cracking of Italy's "calcioscommesse" scandal following his arrest in Finland in 2011.

Interpol told AFP its match-fixing task force currently has 28 members working in Singapore, which is also the site of a new Asian base for the global police body.

With so much activity going on for so long, some observers are wondering how key suspects remain at large in Singapore.

"A question that really must be asked is why so little is being done to question Singaporean individuals allegedly involved in such a global match-fixing operation," Neil Humphreys, a Singapore-based football commentator, told AFP.

"More pertinently, the issue has not received quite the same front-page media attention that it has in other football-popular countries, despite the obvious fact that Singapore is allegedly home to the ringleaders of the world's biggest match-fixing syndicate."

Humphreys is the author of "Match Fixer", a fictional work about a former striker for an English football team who tries to salvage his career in Singapore, only to plunge into a world of vice.

The latest match-fixing revelations come at a troubling time for sport, after Lance Armstrong confessed to drug-cheating his way to his seven Tour de France titles. On Thursday, Australia revealed doping was widespread among its athletes.

- AFP/xq

 

peppertail

Alfrescian
Loyal
Honestly no surprise here. Any government will want to be convinced before taking action on one of its citizens at the request of a foreign government. Why would Singapore want to protect those criminals?
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Champions League ball calls for...

[video=youtube;amZaoONrDO8]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amZaoONrDO8[/video]
 
Last edited:

Prometheus888

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sounds like the govt of singapore is turning a blind eye and going into denial that such things happen here.....No investigations even?
 

lesMISERABLES

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sounds like the govt of singapore is turning a blind eye and going into denial that such things happen here.....No investigations even?

Not just for this specific case. What about corrupt Burmese/Indonesian/Chinese officials laundering their ill-gotten wealth here in sinkieland? What about the prevalence of leepotism and cronynism?
 

Bigfuck

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Solid evidence is beyond SPF. They cannot understand. However, accepted internationally as solid is too fuzzy for our fuzzy brain SPF.
 

aerobwala

Alfrescian
Loyal
These offshore operated gaming houses deploy top notch IT infrastructure, and employing the best in IT industry to run the business. It is a 24*365 kind of operation, multi-millions zipping around bank accounts, zero fault tolerance and conducts real-time defensive warfare against hackers from any corner of the world.
 

Suspicion

Alfrescian
Loyal

Police working with Interpol in global effort against match-fixing

By Patwant Singh | Posted: 08 February 2013 2049 hrs

SINGAPORE: The Singapore Police Force (SPF) is working with Interpol in relation to recent claims of a match-fixing syndicate originating in Singapore.

SPF said that evidence of alleged match-fixing needs to be further developed in order for Singapore law enforcement agencies to take concrete follow-up actions against the alleged suspects.

That is why the SPF will send its officers to Interpol to assist in the current investigations and join the global fight against match-fixing and illegal betting in football.

The authorities reiterated that Singapore remains highly committed in the fight against match-fixing and other trans-national crimes.

If evidence of such crimes exist, the police will pursue the case vigorously to bring the perpetrators to justice.

- CNA/al
 

wendychan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/21383423
European police blame Asian gangsters for match-fixing

Match-fixing investigators in Europe believe governments in Asia are refusing to tackle betting fraud in their own countries.
European police forces revealed 300 new cases of potential match-fixing in The Hague earlier this week .
These 300 games, which were played between 2008 and 2011, are linked to 380 cases already uncovered in Europe.
"It is the same crime cartel in Singapore, no doubt about it," said Friedhelm Althans of German police.
The new games under question are mainly internationals played in Africa, Asia and Central and South America, and investigators feel there is a connection to those they consider are behind attempts to rig games throughout Europe.

The European Union's law enforcement agency, Europol, say they have uncovered an organised crime syndicate based in Asia that is co-ordinating the operation.
"We know who they are. We agreed not to name them on Monday but you only have to look at the internet to find their names - anybody can do it," added Althans, the chief inspector at Germany's organised crime task force.
When asked if one of these names is Dan Tan, a Singaporean who is the subject of an international arrest warrant issued by global police agency Interpol, Althans repeated that he could not give names, but said the individual is well known to police forces around Europe.

Last year, Italian court papers identified Tan - real name Tan Seet Eng - as being the leader of a network of violent criminals who had fixed 33 games in Serie A and Serie B between 2010 and 2011.

Tan, in an interview with Singapore's The New Paper in 2011, said: "Why I'm suddenly described as a match-fixer, I don't know. I'm innocent.
"If there's anything against me, I can take it to court and fight it."
Declan Hill, a Canadian journalist who has written extensively on this subject, has tracked Tan down to a plush neighbourhood in Singapore where the 48-year-old leads a life of luxury, unfettered by police interference.
In response to a question from Hill as to why they had not arrested Tan, Singaporean police said they would "need more information before deciding on our follow-up actions".
Althans' response to this speaks volumes.
"I don't know the law in Malaysia or Singapore, but I can't imagine (match-fixing) isn't illegal. But I don't know what's going on there.
"I'm not a politician, I'm an investigator. I can try to identify this cartel and we have. What happens next is up to the justice system."
His frustration is shared by Fifa president Sepp Blatter, who told reporters in Mauritania on Thursday that football is almost powerless to prevent the sport from being corrupted by determined criminals.

We know there are games that are manipulated and we also know it is very, very difficult to get the organisations (behind the scams)," said Blatter.
"This is a serious danger. If games are rigged, there is no interest in watching football."
Chris Eaton, the former head of security at Fifa, agrees with his ex-boss's bleak view of how vulnerable football is to corruption, but says it is not football's fault.
"Football and all sports need to protect themselves with good regulations and business practices - and they could do that better - but it is not up to them to respond to organised crime," said Eaton, now the director of sports integrity at the International Centre for Sports Security.
"The real issue is betting fraud, without that there would be no money to fix matches. So governments have to regulate international gambling at a global and collective level. Not a national level or regional level.
"The amount of money gambled on sport every week runs into billions - it's a pot of gold for organised crime, particularly in south-east Asia, where it is very under-regulated.
"Governments around the world need to realise the massive amount of money that is available for organised crime through manipulating sports results. And criminals use this money for all kinds of other nefarious activities."
Althans is even clearer.
"We are talking about real gangsters here, absolutely," he said.
"We found that many of these people were involved in international drug-trafficking, but they moved into match-fixing because it was easier, less risky and more lucrative.
"And they use violence to intimidate. That varies from country to country - it is not so serious in western Europe - but in eastern Europe, the Balkans and Asia, it is very serious."
Finding a global response to this scourge will be top of the agenda at a global meeting of sports ministers in Berlin in late May, although a consensus will not be easy with the very issue of gambling being highly controversial in many Asian societies.
But without at least some set of agreed principles - and a commitment to honour international arrest warrants - the likes of Althans and Eaton face a thankless and ultimately futile task.
 
Last edited:

wendychan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
http://www.ft.com/intl/cms/s/0/22488f66-71ef-11e2-886e-00144feab49a.html#axzz2KM3Jp32I

Singapore to help match-fixing probe
By Jeremy Grant in Singapore, Roger Blitz in London and Matt Steinglass in Amsterdam


Singapore is to send police officers to Europe to help with a growing probe into an international football match-fixing syndicate as the city-state has come under pressure to show it is doing more to tackle sports betting crime allegedly masterminded from Asia.
The move is the latest development after a football match-fixing investigation by police in 13 European countries this week concluded that the attempted or successful manipulation of more than 380 professional matches over the past five years was orchestrated by a Singapore-based network.





Interpol, the global policing network, has issued a warrant for the arrest of Dan Tan Seet Eng, a Singaporean financier sought in connection with the alleged cartel. Singapore’s failure to extradite Mr Dan was raised at a conference last month of Interpol’s match-fixing investigations.
“As evidence of alleged match-fixing needs to be further developed in order for our law enforcement agencies to take concrete follow-up actions against the alleged suspects, [we] will send our officers to Interpol to assist in the current investigations and join the global fight against match-fixing and illegal betting in football,” said a statement from Singapore’s police force on Friday.
“Singapore remains highly committed in the fight against match-fixing and other transnational crimes. If evidence of such crimes exist, the police will pursue the case vigorously with a view to bringing the perpetrators to justice,” the statement said.
Ron Noble, Interpol’s secretary-general, said he welcomed Singapore’s “increased and direct involvement” to target match-fixers, which he believed would lead to “positive and visible” results.
But he called for an end to “finger-pointing”, saying: “This concerted effort going forward should not only involve law enforcement but also prosecutors, footballing industry and the betting industry to use the information and intelligence which has been gathered and turn it into concrete results.”
The move was also welcomed by Ralf Mutschke, Fifa’s head of security. “We welcome this initiative from the Singapore police very much. This is the right approach in our joint fight against match manipulation,” Mr Mutschke said.
His predecessor, Chris Eaton, said Singapore’s activity was “delayed and belated, but it’s better late than never”.



read more at the above link
 
Last edited:

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
How sad that SG is now behind the curve in this worldwide match fixing case and is now mentioned in all the news reports concerning this case.
Too busy protecting the elites and going after horny compatriots.
 
Top