Gurgaon, May 23:
Sports Minister Jitendra Singh today said he has been forced to hang his head in shame due to the IPL spot-fixing scandal, insisting that a deterrent law would prevent the credibility crisis that cricket is facing right now.
“It is very shameful. As a young person, as a sports fan, as the Sports Minister of the country, my head hangs in shame today,” Jitendra told reporters here.
“There should be some mechanism so that it doesn’t happen again. And it is not only about cricket. We are talking about cricket because of this expose but there are other sports as well. We have to take preventive action from today onwards. We are working towards it and as soon as we get it, we will take action,” he said.
The Law Ministry is mulling a new anti-fixing legislation to deal with the menace after the latest scandal in which three Rajasthan Royals cricketers were arrested. In fact, several other murky details of the betting racket are tumbling out everyday with police conducting country-wide raids to nab bookmakers, who have underworld connections.
“We are in touch with the Home Ministry and the Law Ministry to work out the law. We will consult the Attorney General before moving forward,” he said.
“It is necessary that there is a law or a deterrent. There is no guarantee that this is not happening in other sports. Who knows it might have started in other sports as well,” Jitendra cautioned.
The Minister refused to comment on the links emerging between bookies and IPL team owners such as Chennai Super Kings’ Gurunath Meiyappan.
“I cannot say about that because investigation is on and the police will take action,” he said.
When asked if the government should have come up with a an anti-fixing law when the first such cricketing scandal broke out in 2000, Jitendra said, “What has happened in the past, I can’t comment on that but the government today is very proactive.”
“It is a matter of law and there are a lot of issues around it. Like who is going to bring it, state subject versus central list. Which ministry is going to pilot it and all these matters have to be resolved. There should have been a law earlier but better late than never,” he added. (PTI)






