'These people who want to make easy money from cricket will always come up with new ways to target players and officials and make them greedy'
"These fixing matters they can never be completely eradicated from cricket or other sports," Malik told PTI in an interview.
"They can be curtailed at the most because these people who want to make easy money from cricket will always come up with new ways to target players and officials and make them greedy," he said.
Malik, 54, was banned for life in 2000 on the recommendation of the Justice (retd) Malik Qayyum inquiry commission into match fixing in Pakistan cricket.
Malik, who later got a reprieve from the Supreme Court after appealing against the ban in a long drawn out legal process, said that the anti-corruption and security units set up by the International Cricket Council and its member boards were also not enough to eradicate the menace of fixing.
"I think the ICC and member boards can make their anti-corruption units more effective by including some high profile and well reputed former players on their units.
“Because only a top player has the experience to detect anything wrong in a match," he said.
"Former police or intelligence officials who work with the ICC and member boards don't have the cricketing acumen or background to immediately notice something suspicious in a match only a cricketer can do that," he added.
The former Pakistan captain, who played 103 Tests and 283 one-day internationals before his ban, said there would always be players who could fall prey to greed.
"It is human nature the best way to further curb this menace is to have more stringent laws to deal with the corrupt."
Malik said he didn't feel there was any noticeable decline in fixing attempts by corrupt gamblers and bookmakers in the last decade or so and referred to the recent fixing issues in New Zealand and Sri Lankan cricket and in the expanding T20 leagues.
Image: Former Pakistan batsman Saleem Malik.
Photograph: Reuters.
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