Australian stars give evidence to bribe inquiry
AFP
8 January 1999
MELBOURNE, Australia, Jan 8 (AFP) - Australian Test cricketer Mark
Waugh told an inquiry here Friday that he received 4,000 US dollars
from an Indian bookmaker for information about weather and pitch
conditions in Sri Lanka.
The Pakistani judicial inquiry into match-fixing was convened here
following after Waugh and teammate Shane Warne admitted they accepted
money from a bookmaker during the 1994 Singer Cup series in Sri Lanka.
Waugh told the inquiry he provided pitch and weather information on
about 10 occasions and received the money from a man identified to him
only as ``John''.
John, who had introduced himself as a bookmaker, also asked for
information about Australian cricketers, team morale and tactics, but
Waugh said he had refused to give any information about individuals or
the team.
He said he had also been approached by former Pakistan cricket captain
Salim Malik during a function in Pakistan and offered 200,000 US
dollars if he could get four or five Australian players to play badly
and lose a match the next day. But he had refused the offer.
Also questioned about his own betting habits, the Australian batsman
said he liked betting on horse-racing but did not bet every day and he
had never bet on cricket.
Waugh, who was cross-examined by Pakistani lawyers for more than 90
minutes, was asked if he knew about the rigging of a particular match
in the 1994 series in which Australia beat Pakistan.
Pakistan Cricket Board legal adviser Ali Sibtain Fazli told Waugh that
the commission had evidence suggesting the match was rigged but Waugh
said the Australian team had no knowledge at all of the allegation.
The Pakistan Commission decided to hear evidence from Waugh and Warne
following disclosures in Australia that they had been secretly fined
by the Australian Cricket Board (ACB) for taking money from the
bookmaker.
The fines were hushed up until the affair was leaked to the media here
last month.
The pair had previously appeared before the commission while on tour
in Pakistan to give evidence concerning their allegations about Malik,
who has denied the charges.
Shortly after Waugh had completed his evidence, a man approached him
in the hearing room brandishing a copy of his written statement and
accusing him of lying about the amount of money he had accepted from
the bookmaker.
Waugh's counsel, Michael Shatin, QC, called a security guard to deal
with the man, who was allowed to remain in the hearing room for the
remainder of the proceedings.
Warne and former Australian Test bowler Tim May were expected to be
called to give evidence later Friday.
The ACB is footing the bill for the inquiry members' flights and
accommodation for this session.
The Melbourne hearing, which is being conducted as a court session, is
continuing before Lahore High Court registrar Abdus Salam Khawar, in
place of inquiry head, High Court Judge Malik Mohammad Qayyum, who was
unable to come to Australia.
Copyright 1998-2001 AFP. All rights reserved. All information displayed on
this page (dispatches, photographs, logos), with the exception of CricInfo
logos and trademarks, are protected by intellectual property rights owned
by Agence France Presse. As a consequence you may not copy, reproduce,
modify, transmit, publish, display or in any way commercially exploit any
of the contents of this section without prior written consent of
Agence-France-Presse.
|