IOC calls for crackdown on 'mafia' gambling

China Daily, March 2, 2011

Olympic chief Jacques Rogge has urged governments around the world to clamp down on illegal betting and license boomakers, warning the credibility of spectator sports is at stake.

"We need their support, they alone have the judicial powers, they can tap telephone calls, they can issue warrants, they can search baggage - we cannot do that," Rogge said ahead of a meeting on the issue at International Olympic Committee (IOC) headquarters in Lausanne on Tuesday.

Rogge said he would be joined by sports federations at the meeting on Tuesday, along with Interpol's chiefs and ministers from Australia, Britain, China and France.

Those countries have legislated on betting and are regarded as a core group that could influence and advise other governments to do the same.

"We are in favor of a system where betting operators have to be licensed by the government," the IOC president said.

He also praised controversial legislation introduced in France and insisted sports should take a cut of licensing fees, partly to finance their own monitoring of irregular betting patterns and match fixing.

"We would like sports organizers - national or international federations - to have a fair return for all the efforts they are making in organizing the sports events," Rogge said.

He warned underground illegal betting was in most cases related to money laundering and organized crime and demanded a coordinated response across all sports and countries similar to the one against doping.

"There is a far bigger danger to the total credibility of sport because these are mafia people and they bet at the same time while manipulating the result of a match," he said.

The IOC set up its own monitoring company after it launched a drive against illict betting in 2006.

Nothing suspicious was found during the Beijing or Vancouver Olympics.

"However we should not be naive, sooner or later this might occur at the Olympic Games and we want to prevent that," Rogge said

European soccer's governing body, UEFA, which has a betting investigation and alert system overseeing 29,000 matches a season, has warned that soccer now needs police help to tackle the issue.

"So many people put so much money into it that it could be a major problem for football tomorrow," UEFA President Michel Platini said last month.