A former cricket player in the UAE has been banned from the sport for 14 years after being found guilty of corruption.
Mehar Chhayakar was found guilty of seven breaches of the sport’s anti-corruption code by an independent tribunal.
The ICC report states that the investigation started as a result of the law enforcement agencies in Zimbabwe in April 2019, “arresting four individuals [including Chhayakar] understood to be involved in attempts to corrupt the matches.”
“Another of the arrested quartet was [Mr X], a known corrupter and someone the ACU had previously linked to Mr Chhayakar,” the report states.
“It is believed that [Mr X] and his group paid US $30,000 to have the Zimbabwe v UAE series televised under a fictitious sponsorship deal with a company called Surya Pump.
“Enquiries with [a betting operator] indicated that Mr Chhayakar had called them and enquired about placing a bet on the Zimbabwe v UAE series.” According to the ICC’s report into the case, that included offering Qadeer, the former UAE seam bowler, Dh60-70,000 to concede 70 runs in a match in the series against Zimbabwe.
Of the UAE players who featured in that Zimbabwe series, six are now serving long-term bans from the sport for corruption.
Qadeer accepted an agreed sanction with the ICC of a five-year suspension in April 2021 for breaches of the anti-corruption code, including failing to report the approach from Chhayakar, who he knew as “Gary”.
Qadeer maintains he did not act on the approach, receive money, or fix any aspect of any match. In the three matches he played in the Zimbabwe series, he went for 16 runs, 42 runs, and 57 runs.
Shabber, the former wicketkeeper, left the UAE without explanation midway through the 2019 World Cup Qualifier in Abu Dhabi, subsequently saying he had retired from cricket.
According to the report on the Chhayakar case, this “excited the [anti-corruption unit’s] suspicions, since resignation occurred at about the same time as a number of UAE players were being summoned for interview” in relation to allegations of corruption.
In the course of the investigation, Shabber acknowledged he had been approached by Chhayakar to fix. He said he did not act on it, but accepted a four-year ban for failing to report the approach.
The report also states that Shabber received Dh7,500 via Chhayakar’s mother’s account four months prior to being interviewed as part of the investigation.
Alex Marshall, the general manager of the ICC’s integrity unit, said the length of the ban should serve as a warning.
“We first encountered Mehar Chhayakar through his involvement in organising a corrupt cricket tournament in Ajman, in 2018,” Marshall said.
“The charges for which he has now received a lengthy ban are further examples of his continuing efforts to corrupt and damage our sport.
“We will be relentless in pursuing and disrupting the people who try to corrupt cricket.
"With a ban of 14 years, the tribunal has sent a clear message to anyone intending to corrupt our game.”
Chhayakar’s offences related to “fixing or contriving to” influence improperly “the result, progress, conduct or any other aspect” of matches.
This included “directly or indirectly soliciting, inducing, enticing, instructing, persuading, encouraging or intentionally facilitating” a player to fix aspects of matches.
The charges also relate to the Global T20 league in Canada in 2019.
The ICC's anti-corruption unit said Chhayakar had also been involved in organising the Ajman Allstars, a corrupt cricket tournament which was unsanctioned that took place at the Ajman Oval.
Online sources
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