The violence of gamblers again in Indian cricket
The shadow of match-fixing again in Indian cricket. Alex Marshall, an official with the International Cricket Council's (ICC) anti-corruption wing, told The Telegraph that there were 12 gamblers operating in India at the moment.
The 12 gamblers are now involved in most of the 42 match-fixing cases the ICC now has. It is known that now cricket fixing is being done using modern technology like Bitcoin.
According to Marshall, the interrogation of one of the gamblers is going on in Delhi. As a result, he and the ICC's anti-corruption wing hope the key to the match-fixing cycle will soon be in their hands. Marshall also posted a picture of how gamblers work.
A competition called 'UVA T20 League' is going on in a village near Mohali in Punjab, India. But the book shows that this competition is going on in Sri Lanka. Punjab police arrested a man named Rabindra Dandiwal on charges of fixing in the contest. He is also accused of fixing tennis matches in different parts of the world. According to Marshall, during the epidemic, gamblers offered to fix select cricketers who had created a financial crisis.
"These gamblers from India are now using modern technology," said Marshall. Not only that, gamblers are using apps that do not contain messages. These gamblers are using burner phones (prepaid minute chip phones, which do not require any documents to buy).