Top former cricketer Rahul Dravid and Ranjit Sinha Director of Central Bšureau of Investigatioąµ²n (CBI), Indiaās premier investigating agency, asked the government to consider legalising sports betting to prevent corruption in sport and bring revenues by way of taxation.
In a panel discussion on legalising sports betting organised by CBI to celebrate their golden jubiš³lee, Sinha and Dravid made the comments on the need to legalise sports betting in the country. The event was inaugurated by Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh in the presence of Union Law Minister Kapil Sibal and Union Minister of State for the Prime Ministerās office V Narayansamy.
Speaking in a panel discussion on the 3-day āInternational Conference on evolving common Strategies to Combat Corruption and Crimeā Dravid commenš¤Ŗted, āIf law enforcement agencies feel it is right, betting in sports should be legalisedā¦I believe that it is now time for legal reform and the turn of national and state legislature and the criminal law administration to intervene.ā
Ranjit Sinha also this view, āIf we can have lottery in states, if we can have casinos at holiday resorts. If the government can declare schemes of voluntary disclosurļ·ŗe for black money, so whats the harm in legalising betting.Besides youll have enforcement agencies toš° look into itā¦ā
However Sinha went a step further and made rather controversial and inseš¼nstive comments equating sports betting with rape, āAbove all, do we have the enforcement agencies? If you canāt enforce it, it is like you canāt prevent rape, enjoy it. It is better to legalize it and earn some revenue rather than throwing up your handsā¦ā
[Update: Sinha has expressed regret over his āunintended and inadvertentā analogy comparing rape with sports betting as per media reports].
Thš¬e comments of Sinha,the countryās top investigator and Dravid, a widely reź¦spected cricketer whose IPL team faced fixing allegations assume significance as the proposal for legalising was made in a government platform in a conference organised by the CBI. The conference has been endorsed and inaugurated by the Prime Minister of India and attended by top government officials. The government has definitely taken cognisance of these views but it remains to be seen whether there would be any concrete action based on these suggestions.
Interestingly, FICCI had organised a similar conference on leź¦galising and regulaāting sports betting last month and had advocated legalising betting to earn revenue and prevent cheating. Law Minister Kapil Sibal, Rahul Dravid and Leader of Opposition in the Rajya Sabha Arun Jaitley were invited as speakers but they were unable to attend the conference due to other commitments.