Clamour grows for legalised betting in India

NEW DELHI, (Reuters) – The  Pakistan spot-fixing scandal has once again shone the spotlight  on illegal betting in the sub-continent and reopened the debate  on the legalisation of gambling in India.

Since the Australian duo of Shane Warne and Mark Waugh  admitted in 1998 to passing information to an Indian bookmaker  during a 1994 tournament, cricket has seldom had a financial  scandal without an Indian connection.

The latest spot-fixing scandal, in which Pakistan bowlers  Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir are alleged to have bowled  three deliberate no-balls by arrangement, continued the trend.

Arrested by British police on suspicion of defrauding  bookmakers, Mazhar Majeed claimed he dealt with an Indian  party. Two Australian cricketers also said they were approached  by an Indian bookie in England last year.

Lawyer Rahul Mehra, who has fought numerous legal battles  against cricket and other sports bodies in India seeking  transparency in their functions, is not surprised.

“The Indians bet on the weather, crops and even smaller and  trivial things. Cricket is a religion here and India is the  financial hub. So it’s hardly a surprise that an India-Pakistan  ODI draws bets worth $20 million,” Mehra told Reuters.

“The only thing is that here betting is not legal which is  why there is little government control over the industry.”

Legal gambling in India is confined to horse-racing while  casinos are allowed only in a couple of states.

Illegal syndicates are thriving, however, and Indian media  estimates put the amount bet on last year’s Indian Premier  League (IPL) at $427 million.

A Delhi trial court judge on Tuesday said gambling on  cricket should be legalised to prevent the spoils being spent  on criminal activity and to generate revenue for the  government.

Former India cricket chief Inderjit Bindra has long been a  supporter of legalisation for similar reasons and to help the  fight against match-fixing.

“If betting is legalised, it will be in the interest of the  government as not only will it eliminate match-fixing but also  earn states revenue in crores (tens of millions),” Bindra, now  an adviser at the International Cricket Council (ICC), said two  years ago. “My personal view is that if you want anything to be  regulated, it has to be legalised.”

The cost to the image of cricket from the involvement of  Indian bookmakers in the manipulation of results has been huge.

The game suffered arguably its biggest crisis since the  Bodyline series of the 1930s when Delhi Police released the  transcript of former South African captain Hansie Cronje’s  conversation with an Indian bookie in 2000.

Subsequently, three international captains — Cronje, Salim  Malik of Pakistan and India’s Mohammad Azharuddin — received  life bans, while a host of players were fined.

In the same year, Sri Lankan cricketers revealed being  approached by Indian bookies during their 1992 tour of  Australia, suggesting the rot had started much earlier than  thought.

LEGALISED BETTING

INDUSTRY

In 2004, former New Zealand skipper Stephen Fleming said he  had been approached by an Indian sports promoter, while in 2008  West Indies batsman Marlon Samuels was banned for two years for  passing information to an Indian bookie.

Columnist Ashok Malik, who comments on politics and the  business of sport, does not subscribe to the view that  legalising betting would end the problem.

“People should not confuse illegal betting with  spot-fixing. Spot-fixing is as much a possibility even in a  legalised betting industry,” he said.

“It’s not legality, the problem starts when bookies try to  get prior knowledge of events and are ready to share their  profit with the cricketers to fix incidents.”

“Having a legalised betting industry is not the solution.  It’s like owning a hotel fulfilling all the legal criteria and  then running a prostitution racket there.”

Malik does, however, believe that gambling on the nation’s  favourite sport should be legalised.

“When lotteries and gambling on horse racing is legal, it  is ridiculous not to legalise cricket betting.”

Mehra believes the Indian government should set up a  commission to regulate the industry.

“Legalising betting is important, for this is no secret  that everyone, including businessmen and corporate houses,  wants to bet on cricket,” he said.

“Besides, legalising it would give the government some  control over the industry. They should think about setting up  something like a Betting Commission or Gambling Commission.

“Bookies would have to register themselves and everything  should be bound by rules and regulation. Whenever you see  anything fishy in the odds, you can track down the culprits.

“It would help not only the players, but also the bookies,  spectators, government and the game as well.”