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World of Social Media

Posted by karthik

Socializing is the new way of living. The best way forward in socializing, in the world of internet is social media.Many social networking sites are at our service. Share, talk, chat, friends, play, read, blog, trace* as well.The more you see it, the more you love it!

Technology for YOU

Posted by Author Karthik

Technology-Imagine a day without your P.C, T.V, I-Pod,internet,electricity. It can't get tougher.Come explore the new inventions, trends in the techno world. Connect yourself!

Space-Come see it!

Posted by Author Karthik

SPACE- For most of us its a mystery. For some people, it's a puzzle. But, there are some people who are wanting and waiting to know the mystery that surrounds us. We bring you the news that matters and answers YOU! Come see it!

Humor-Laugh with us

Posted by Author Karthik

The only thing which makes us feel better after a long tiring day. It can make you cry smiling. It is not exageration to say there is no person in this universe who hates humor. Humor is one of the best quality who could find in a person! COME LAUGH WITH US!

Supernatural-See the inside YOU!

Posted by Author KARTHIK

Dejavu is the experience of feeling sure that one has witnessed or experienced a new situation previously (an individual feels as though an event has already happened or has happened in the recent past), although the exact circumstances of the previous encounter are uncertain.COME EXPLORE THE INSIDE YOU!

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 "This is undoubtedly the biggest match-fixing scandal that European football has ever seen. Now we must do everything to make sure those referees, players and officials are taken to justice."
 


A match-fixing ring with more than 200 suspected members fixed or tried to fix around 200 matches across Europe, including three in the Champions League, in what UEFA called the biggest betting scandal in Europe.

Bochum state prosecutor Andreas Bachmann said at a news conference on Friday initial estimates put the illegal gains at about 10 million euros ($14.85 million) but he added that the figure was just "the tip of the iceberg".


Police in Germany, Britain, Austria and Switzerland cracked down on the ring on Thursday, staging simultaneous raids that resulted in 15 arrests in Germany and two in Switzerland.Officers also seized one million euros ($1.49 million) in cash or goods as part of the investigation into the suspected manipulation of games across nine European leagues.

Some 50 properties were searched in the four countries.


"We at (European soccer's governing body) UEFA are stunned by the magnitude of this," UEFA representative Peter Limacher told reporters at a Bochum police news conference on Friday.


"This is undoubtedly the biggest match-fixing scandal that European football has ever seen. Now we must do everything to make sure those referees, players and officials are taken to justice."



HUNDREDS OF MATCHES

Bochum police said 200 people were suspected of involvement in attempts to rig about 200 matches in 2009, some during the current season.

No details of which teams or players and officials involved were released.

"There was a group of individuals who did or tried to influence matches with money and make illegal profit through the placing of bets," said Bachmann.

A City of London spokeswoman said in a statement: "Following a request from German law enforcement officers, City of London police assisted in the execution of a search warrant in the Greater London area on Thursday."

She added no arrests had been made and just one property was searched.

Some 32 matches in Germany's lower divisions as well as dozens of first or second division matches in Turkey, Belgium, Bosnia, Hungary, Croatia, Switzerland, Austria and Slovenia were under investigation.

Twelve matches in the Europa League, the second-tier European club competition behind the elite Champions League, were also under suspicion as well as several Under 21 European Championship qualifiers.

In 2005, Germany was rocked by a betting scandal involving Bundesliga referee Robert Hoyzer, who rigged matches as part of an international illegal betting gang and was sentenced to two years and five months in prison.

"Even if the German professional football is only partly involved we will fully support the effort to expose this," German League chief Reinhard Rauball said on Friday.

"We owe it to the fans to do everything within our power to offer a clean competition."



Agency : Yahoo

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