FIFA steps up fight against $90 bln match-fixing industry

FIFA steps up fight against $90 bln match-fixing industry

SINGAPORE, (Reuters) – Soccer match-fixing yields $90  billion annually, a figure equivalent to legal betting, FIFA’s  security chief Chris Eaton said today, emphasising the  need to curb corruption in the sport.
FIFA president Sepp Blatter last week pledged 20 million  euros ($28.53 million) for a dedicated anti-corruption unit  based in Singapore to fight match-fixing, which police officials  said was a low-risk, high profit form of crime.
“Criminality involved in fixing football matches is global,  enormous and organised,” Eaton said. “Football is too respected  globally to not be protected.”
“These are criminals taking advantage. They are not to be  respected, they are not Robin Hoods, they are not good people.  They hurt players and they destroy careers.”
The unit, in a partnership with Interpol, aims to develop a  programme for soccer officials, players and administrators that  warns against match-fixing and alerts them to how it dishonours  the game and might ruin their careers.
It will involve international education and training over  e-learning. Interpol will also brief and debrief players before  and after every competition to ensure they are fully aware of  what match-fixing might do to their careers.
“We protect young players, we protect young referees by  teaching them to resist the temptations that these people are  trying to take advantage of,” Eaton, a one-time Interpol  officer, said.
But the unit will not actively seek to clamp down or  prosecute match-fixers.
“FIFA is a football management organisation. It is not an  investigation organisation. We don’t conduct a lot of security  operations with a little bit of football. We conduct a lot of  football with a little bit of security,” Eaton said.
“Prosecution is not my priority, in fact, not a priority at  all.”