"Cricket has a proud tradition as a byword for fair play. To keep that reputation the International Cricket Council must start implementing reforms that will strengthen transparency in cricket and address the many corruption risks that threaten the game," Transparency International said in a report titled 'Fair Play: Strengthening Integrity and Transparency in Cricket'.
Transparency International said, although much of focus of combating corruption in cricket has been in area of match-fixing, it considered it vital that everyone in the game, including cricket administrators, to operate to the highest standards of cricket and integrity if the message of zero tolerance for corruption on the pitch is to be taken seriously.
"The ICC has commissioned two recent governance reviews in the past two years but there has been no update on whether the suggested reforms have been implemented. We believe that the ICC should take the following steps as soon as possible to achieve greater transparency and accountability:
"Publish Information about its anti-corruption programs and procedures; increase the independence of the Board and Committees, by introducing independent non-executive directors; publish a progress report on the implementation of the Woolf and De Speville reports; publish minutes and decisions of Board and Committee meetings," it said.
