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Australia and England Monday rejected fresh allegations about corruption in cricket by television news channel Al Jazeera, which claimed there had been 26 spot-fixing incidents in 15 international matches. In a follow-up documentary to one aired earlier this year, the Qatari-based broadcaster reported on Sunday that a small group of England players allegedly cheated in seven games between 2011 and 2012.
It claimed Australian players were similarly involved in five matches over the same period, Pakistan players in three and players from other, unidentified, teams in one match. "In some cases, both teams appear to have delivered a fix," it said, pointing to purported recordings of a match-fixer calling in the fixes to a notorious Indian bookmaker linked to organised crime. It alleged that the suspected fixes were usually carried out by batsmen who agreed to underperform.
Among the matches cited were England against India at Lord's, South Africa versus Australia in Cape Town, and several games during England's series against Pakistan in the United Arab Emirates.
The International Cricket Council said it had launched an investigation and would work with professional independent betting analysts. "The ICC is committed to working to uphold integrity in cricket," said the head of the governing body's anti-corruption unit Alex Marshall. "As you would expect we will again take the contents of the programme and any allegations it may make seriously and will investigate fully."
The ICC also launched a probe after the original Al Jazeera documentary and in August Marshall said "we have been able to discount a number of claims made in the programme and continue to pursue other aspects". That documentary alleged corruption among Australia and England players in games in 2016 and 2017.
Those claims were dismissed by both countries, with the latest documentary sparking a similar response from Cricket Australia and the England Cricket Board.
"Cricket Australia takes a zero-tolerance approach against anyone trying to compromise the integrity of the game, and to suggest anything otherwise is unsubstantiated and incorrect," CA chief executive James Sutherland said Monday.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2018

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