Stuart Page (ICSS Director, Strategy and Policy Development (Anti-Corruption/Transparency) - second from left) and Jake Marsh (Investigator at the ICSS, far right) with the 2014 Street Child World Cup Winners. |
The ICSS Sport Integrity team with the Tanzania Under-17 Football Squad | |
Jake Marsh (Investigator at the ICSS, far right) with young players from the Tanzania Street Children’s Sports Academy and Street Skillz Programme in Mwanza, Tanzania |
Stuart Page (ICSS Director, Strategy and Policy Development (Anti-Corruption/Transparency) - left) with the 2014 Street Child World Cup |
Dar es Salaam/Mwanza, 15th July 2014: The International Centre for Sport Security (ICSS) this week delivered the first in a series of match-fixing education and prevention workshops to young players in Africa.
As part of the ICSS’s
commitment to educate young players about the dangers of match-fixing, Stuart Page, ICSS
Director, Strategy and Policy Development (Anti-Corruption/Transparency)
and Jake Marsh,
Investigator at the ICSS, led a three-day programme that included
delivering match-fixing and integrity workshops to young players and
officials at leading Tanzanian organisations, including the Tanzanian Football Federation (TFF), Symbion /Sunderland AFC Project
– Africa’s first privately-owned football academy - and the Tanzania Street Children’s
Sports Academy.
Aimed at educating 12-18
year old players playing at an academy level as well as children in
more vulnerable areas in Tanzania, the programme kicked-off with a presentation
to the Tanzania
Under-17 Squad at the Karume National Stadium. Rising football
stars from the Symbion Football Academy – a joint academy and football
development project between Symbion Power, Sunderland AFC and the Tanzanian
Government – attended the seminars alongside leading officials and
coaches from the TFF including Salam Madadi, Technical Director, TFF, and Stewart Hall, Technical Director, Symbion / Sunderland AFC Project
and Technical Advisor to the TFF.
Players attending the
seminars learnt about a range of topics, including how match-fixers
approach and groom young players, methods to help recognise, resist
and report an approach, as well as being warned about the very serious
and real consequences of match-fixing.
Stuart Page of the ICSS said: “Education and prevention is central to
the ICSS’s work to eradicate match-fixing and the athlete is at the
very heart of this strategy. As the ICSS deliver the first in a series
of match-fixing workshops in Africa, over the last three days we have
visited several organisations that are central to shaping the lives
of young people in Tanzania.
“Targeting young players,
especially those in Africa which has had many match-fixing cases emerge
over the last few years, will help more players in the future recognise,
resist and report approaches by match-fixers.
“During our visit,
we have been overwhelmed by the response of the players and coaches
that have been part of this programme to warn young people about match-fixing.
Their enthusiasm and understanding about the importance of their role
in tackling this issue will hopefully encourage more clubs, federations
and associations to deliver programmes like the one seen in Tanzania
this week.”
Speaking to players
at the seminar, Salam Madadi said: “Match-fixing is one of the most serious
issues now facing African football and I am delighted to welcome the
ICSS here for the first time. The TFF is serious about addressing match-fixing
and educating our young academy players is central to our approach to
tackling this problem. Today’s workshop with the ICSS provided some
of Tanzania’s rising football stars with many important lessons and
I look forward to welcoming back the ICSS Sport Integrity team in the
future.”
Stewart Hall, Technical Director, Symbion / Sunderland AFC Project
and Technical Advisor to the TFF said: “Developing and educating
young players is absolutely crucial to the future of any sport, not
just football. For far too long, match-fixing has been under the radar
and I hope that through workshops like this, young players around Africa
will be able to learn about how to respond to an approach by a suspected
match-fixer. Through this programme, developed between the ICSS and
the Symbion / Sunderland AFC Project, I hope that Tanzania will be able
to produce young players and coaches that believe in maintaining the
highest possible standards and integrity both on and off the pitch.”
Alongside the programmes’
objective to reach out to more vulnerable players as well as future
professionals, the ICSS team also presented to the Tanzania Street Children’s (TSC) Sports Academy. Recently
crowned the 2014 Street Child World Champions, the TSC Sports Academy invited the ICSS to deliver a match-fixing
prevention seminar to street children and vulnerable young people from
around the Mwanza region to educate and warn about how match-fixers
approach and groom young players.
Altaf Hirani, President of the Tanzanian Street Children’s Sports
Academy, said: “As part of the TSC Academy’s role in developing
street kids around Tanzania, the ICSS Sport Integrity team has delivered
an important lesson to many of our children about the dangers of match-fixing.
By working with recognised experts like the ICSS, the TSC Academy will
be able to provide children across Tanzania with an important opportunity
to learn about how criminals target young people and the communities
they live in, as well as what to do when put in that situation.”
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