Cricket Canada suspended over allegations of gang-linked corruption
ICCโs decision comes amid growing concerns the team is being influenced by members of a notorious gang in India Cricketโs international governing body has suspended Canada over what it described as โserious breaches of its membership obligationsโ, dealing the latest blow to an o
ICCโs decision comes amid growing concerns the team is being influenced by members of a notorious gang in India
Cricketโs international governing body has suspended Canada over what it described as โserious breaches of its membership obligationsโ, dealing the latest blow to an organization that critics say has become a โlaughing stockโ within the sport.
The suspension also comes amid growing concerns that one of Canadaโs fastest-growing sports is being influenced by members of a notorious gang that operates with impunity from an Indian prison cell .
The International Cricket Council (ICC) finalized the suspension at a meeting in Ahmedabad, India, on Sunday amid mounting concerns about the governance of Canadaโs national cricket body. The decision follows the freezing of Cricket Canadaโs funding in May after allegations that the organization lacked adequate governance systems and had failed to file audited financial statements.
In a statement, Cricket Canadaโs new interim chief operating officer, Bhavjit Jauhar, said the ICC suspension was โunexpectedโ but that the organization wonโt challenge the decision. Instead it โremains fully committed to meeting all compliance requirementsโ. Jauhar said an independent investigation will look into governance and financial controls.
In recent months, Canadaโs cricket governing body has been the subject of explosive allegations from the Fifth Estate, CBCโs investigative unit. The show said its wide-ranging investigation found corruption, coercion, evidence of match-fixing and other misconduct within Cricket Canada.
In one instance, the national outlet flagged questionable promotions within the ranks of players and accusations from senior staff that members at the top of the organization were ordering elements of matches to be fixed. One member of the national team told CBC that certain players were meant to rise quickly through the ranks โ including to the level of captain. Players received threats that they could be killed if they didnโt cooperate.
Because sports betting has grown increasingly sophisticated and the amounts staked have grown so much, gamblers can bet money on possible errors and batting orders.

