CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) A policeman with South Africa's organized crime unit on Friday described the arrest and corruption charges against a football referee as "just the tip of an iceberg" in a second major match-fixing case in the former World Cup host country.
Capt. Paul Ramaloko told The Associated Press his Directorate for Priority Crime Investigation expects to make more arrests in connection with attempts to fix at least one game at a lower-league promotion tournament in 2011. It's a further blow to South Africa's already-damaged football reputation after it agreed with FIFA to investigate separate allegations of fixing in national team friendlies in the immediate buildup to the 2010 World Cup.
Referee Clifford Malgas, a member of the South African Football Association's national refereeing panel, appeared in court in Johannesburg on Thursday and faces charges of corruption and perjury. Malgas is accused of facilitating a bribe to another referee to fix a game at that league promotion tournament. He will be transferred to a Cape Town court for a second hearing next week.
"This is just the tip of an iceberg," Ramaloko said of Malgas' arrest, adding that "the person doing the bribing" was yet to be arrested.
Malgas was initially implicated during the trial of former South Africa assistant coach Phil Setshedi, who was jailed for three years in February for trying to bribe a referee to fix a game at the same tournament two years ago. At the time, South Africa's National Prosecution Authority said it was its first conviction for match-fixing in football.