LONDON: The Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London on Monday cleared the extradition of alleged Indian bookie Sanjeev Chawla, a key accused in the cricket match-fixing scandal involving former South African captain Hansie Cronje in 2000, Press Trust of India reports. The case will now go to UK home secretary Sajid Javid for a formal extradition order.
According to court documents, the 50-year-old Delhi-born businessman had moved to the UK on a business visa in 1996, where he has been based while making trips back and forth to India. After his Indian passport was revoked in 2000 following the scandal, Chawla obtained a UK passport in 2005 and is now a British citizen.
In November, the UK High Court quashed a lower court’s order against extraditing Chawla to India and directed the District Judge to re-start the extradition proceedings against him after being convinced with the assurances by the Indian government on the safety of prison conditions in New Delhi’s Tihar jail.
Chawla had won the case against his extradition to India in 2017 after the Westminster Magistrates’ Court concluded there was a prima facie case to answer but his human rights could not be guaranteed in Tihar jail, where he was to be held. In its ruling, the High Court ruled that it is convinced with the assurances provided by the Indian government regarding the safety of prison conditions in Tihar jail as it quashed the lower court’s order against extraditing Chawla.
District Judge Crane’s judgment dated 16 October 2017, had accepted a prima facie case against Chawla over his role in the fixing of “cricket matches played between India and South Africa during the tour of the South African Cricket Team to India under the captainship of Cronje in February-March 2000”.



