Millions offered to Onduparaka to lose to Tooro, Wakiso Giants

Targeted. Striker Caesar Okhuti’s Onduparaka are unfortunately caught up in this match-fixing scandal because of the officials’ recent failure to pay player wages and the club’s well-documented financial troubles.

It is hardly a new occurrence, really -

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. Only that those involved in the actual, or its victims have struggled for boldness to come out.
But Uganda Premier League (UPL) side, Onduparaka, showed some cojones last week, the West Nile outfit outing a statement that the vice had grown so much the game risked being eaten out completely. An invasion, they called it.
“Onduparaka FC is concerned about the growing invasion of the Uganda Premier League (UPL) by persons whose sole agenda is to manipulate league games with promises of huge sums of money to those willing to adhere to their demands,” reads in part their statement.

The statement goes ahead to highlight how the club had been approached by several individuals asking them to sell matches, and calls upon all stakeholders to “protect the league from such self-seeking individuals.”
“We have made it very clear internally that any player or staff found engaging in match fixing will be automatically dismissed from the club.”

The inside tale
What Onduparaka did not do, however, is name the said aggressors. Daily Monitor put it to the club that if they were really serious about fighting the vice, they had to come clean on who actually approached them.
Club patron Bernard Atiku said they will be writing to football authorities and coping in Fifa. “We have their phone numbers and will expose them without fear or favour,” he told Daily Monitor, “We shall retrieve the voice records.”
Unscrupulous characters reportedly approached club chairman Benjamin Nyakuni and a player before games against Tooro United and Wakiso Giants, asking him to throw away the matches for millions, according to Onduparaka marketing, communications and PR head Mercy Grace Manduru.
“People would only make claims about it,” said Manduru, “Sometimes we would even notice the way some games are played, or the conduct of coaches and players, the way officials would officiate certain games, you would see it but of course there was no tangible evidence.

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“The first evidence we had was when our former coach (Livingston Mbabazi is their most recent) told us he had been approached by some two gentlemen that he didn’t really name.
“They told him that if he wanted to get some money out of the league, he should sell certain games.
“So he told us that he out-rightly refused and these gentlemen had been calling him and at some point he blocked their numbers. He shared that with us as management to caution us. We let that pass.”

The offers
“So when we started the second half of the season, somebody WhatsApp-ed our chairman using what seemed an international number.”
So this person inquired from Nyakuni whether he was the chairman of Onduparaka, telling him he got his number from his associates and that he wanted to do business with him.
When the chairman probed the ‘unwanted guest’ what kind of business he wanted to run with Onduparaka, he was told: “We want to help you manage your games and we will be paying you heavily for it. We are working with other clubs in the league,” said the fixer.
Manduru added: “It was like a dream to our chairman,” she said, “And that was before we played Tooro. The guy (fixer) said, ‘for example, for the Tooro game, if you allow to be beaten 3-0 in the first half we will give you $10,000 (Shs37m).”

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Just make sure the goals are scored in the first 30 minutes and then money is yours, and we can do business together.” Tooro lost that game by forfeiture after they failed to raise the minimum number of seven players, due to lack of licenses, to start the match.
“Our chairman told them it’s against his beliefs and his faith, and therefore he would not compromise his integrity. He wished the guy a good day.”
The fixer was taken aback. “You mean $10,000 is not enough? Do you want more money?” Nyakuni reportedly assured the guy he was not interested and ended the conversation.
“So when chairman shared this with me and the rest of the team, we were really puzzled at how bold they are. Actually, the other guy wanted to call chairman but he declined.”
Then after the 1-1 draw with Maroons, Onduparaka got another ‘guest’. “Somebody called one of our players and said ‘we’ve just finished with the game of Police and Express, so we would like to work with you for your game against Wakiso Giants.”

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Police annihilated Express 6-1 in that one. That, and the 7-1 whitewash of Kyetume by Onduparaka, are some of several games the public has raised eyebrows over.
The player asked the caller what he meant. “They then told him (the player), ‘Get three or four players, name your price, allow to be beaten by Wakiso Giants and let all the three goals be scored in the first half.
“Make sure in the four players the goalkeeper is included. The player refused but the caller insisted, telling him how they are not paid, how they have no money but he held his ground.”
Scared, the unnamed player called the club chairman and explained what just happened. “That’s when I told the chairman we need to make a public statement before we play the game. Onduparaka lost that one 1-0 to Wakiso Giants.

Red Eagles Trapped. Express were mauled 6-1 by Police in a listless and inspid display by the former during a Uganda Premier League encounter at the StarTimes Stadium in Lugogo. The match left many citing match-fixing as the catalyst of the result.

PHOTOS BY EDDIE CHICCO & JOHN BATANUDDE


It is not clear whether these fixers are working for clubs or their own unscrupulous chains.
Ismael Kiyonga is the Head of Corporate Affairs at Wakiso Giants. “The players who were allegedly called should help the football fraternity by naming the culprits as this would greatly help in investigations,” he said.
“As a club, we are unaware of anything like this. We distance ourselves from such acts and we hope relevant authorities investigate the matter to the dot.”
Tooro United shareholder Smart Obed admits “there are wrong elements messing with our game but as Tooro, we are not part of anything like that,” he said.

UPL, Fufa speak out
Onduparaka’s Manduru said that after the statement went online, some people called ‘advising’ them to pull it down, that many people were involved and it was not good for the club. “As Onduparaka, we shall speak out.”
Asked what they are doing about Onduparaka’s whistle blowing, the league CEO, Bernard Bainamani, said Onduparaka “should be summoned by the relevant judicial body of Fufa to own or disown the statement.
“If they own it, then, they help in providing evidence which will form the basis for more investigations and/or action by Fufa.”
Fufa spokesperson Ahmed Hussein says it is a “good decision taken by Onduparaka,” and “our football bodies will follow up in this serious matter as we need to protect the game.”
The FA have previously instituted the Dan Kidega commission early 2018 to probe alleged match-fixing, where coaches, referees and some players faced his committee.
“Our judicial bodies have handled such cases before and some football officials have since been banned from football,” said Hussein.

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The officials said to have been banned include Bul FC CEO Salmin Saleh for two years, referee assessor Ndawula Shaban Mawanda for six months, centre referees Ali Kaddu and Ashraf Miiro, one year each.
Richard Kimbowa is, according to Hussein, still under investigation and cannot officiate. All these were found guilty of tempering with matches in the Kidega commission.
However, this report has never been publicly released. “Matters raised in the report may go public while others are handled by executive,” insisted Hussein.
“Matters of ethics have been made public by handing individuals sanctions while others were just a matter of work procedures that needed Fufa to align its members, staff and other football officials.” Police have also previously probed Uganda’s 2-0 away defeat to Guinea (2015 Afcon qualifiers) and several other match fixing cases in the country but investigations have rarely been conclusive, thus making it very difficult for court to prosecute any culprits.

Some alleged match fixing cases

  • Clubs such as URA, Police and Express among others have previously terminated contracts of players accused of match fixing. However, some of those players continue to play in the league, in some cases for the same clubs that suspended them.
  • URA coach Sam Simbwa also served an eight-month ban from football activities while still at KCCA after an audio attributed to him claiming to bribe referees leaked to the media.
  • An ‘international friendly match’ involving Express and Soana at Wankulukuku in 2016, which the former won 3-2, was also reported to have been fixed. Fufa announced investigations into it but findings have never come out.
  • Police also investigated cases involving local clubs, plus a Uganda Cranes match away to Guinea (in Morocco) which had a Nigerian at the centre of an alleged match fixing storm. Investigations inconclusive.