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Botham accuses ICC of being soft on corruption

November 02, 2011 15:48 IST

Former England cricket captain and legendary all-rounder Ian Botham on Wednesday accused the International Cricket Council (ICC) of being soft on corruption in the past and asked the governing body to be more proactive in its approach to deal the menace.

The former great pointed out that the conviction of the former Pakistan captain Salman Butt and Mohammad Asif has put an added responsibility on both the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) and the ICC to act on an urgent basis.

- 'It's a sad day for Pakistan cricket'

"Pakistani cricket has serious problems it needs to address and with three of its players caught up in this case, the question is whether there are more," Botham insisted.

"The Pakistan Cricket Board have a responsibility to act now, as do the International Cricket Council who have been so weak in the past and have swept problems like this under the carpet.

Ian Botham"The ICC must be constructive. Everyone seems to pretend the issue isn't there. It is and must be addressed," Botham wrote in his column for the Daily Mirror.

The veteran reiterated that what happened with Pakistan cricket can happen with any other nation and urged the governing body to instil a sense of fear among the cricketers against corrupt practices.

"You have to put fear into the players and make them realise, 'This is my career, this is my future, is it worth it?'," said Botham.

"This is the line in the sand the authorities have been looking for and it is not just Pakistan who need to be worried. Evidence suggests corruption found an ideal place to grow in that country but can happen anywhere and for any other nation to think otherwise would be foolish," he added.

The English all-rounder said that a jail term can be strong deterrent for other cricketers who gets approached for even a slightest of favours.

"Should both players be jailed it would be the ultimate warning for any cricketer who gets approached even for the tiniest bit of information, let alone with orders to bowl no-balls," Botham said.

He, however, raised his concern for the young cricketers who can be lured and forced by the senior members.

"My worry always will be for young players who can be more easily manipulated and threatened by those senior to them. That is why I'm pleased the jury saw just how much influence Butt had and how he orchestrated the whole thing," Botham noted.

 

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