
Audio By Carbonatix
Four soccer referees in the southern African country of Malawi have been banned for life for match-fixing after they received just $20 between them to fix a game and returned $15 to the team doing the bribing because it still lost.
The match-fixing was revealed after Nchalo United, the team that bribed the refs, lost in a penalty shootout after a 1-1 draw and demanded its money back. When the referees could only stump up $15, Nchalo went to the authorities.
No sanctions have been announced against the team but there is a case against Nchalo pending.
The life ban for the four officials was announced by the Malawian referees association.
Although the result wasn’t what they were aiming for, Malawi National Referees Association general secretary Chris Kalichero said there was still an “element of game-fixing” by the officials and “when you commit such a crime, a life ban is the punishment.”
Chisambi, one of the assistant referees, denied any wrongdoing, saying ”I never took (a) share of the money. It is so sad that my career has ended in this manner.”
Last year, another referee in Malawi was banned for life for incompetence.
Latest Stories
-
We faced teams that had been building for years – Kofi Adams explains Ghana’s World Cup reality
40 minutes -
‘Extremely happy’ Deschamps gets the farewell game no-one wants
59 minutes -
World Cup final half-time to last up to 25 minutes
1 hour -
Ghana’s 2026 artisanal gold output likely to surpass record 2025 level, Gold Board says
1 hour -
Trump threatens to bomb bridges and power plants unless Iran resumes talks
2 hours -
US Congress takes next step to make daylight saving time permanent
2 hours -
Nigeria pension assets jump 51% to $22.8 billion, regulator says
2 hours -
Trump retreat over Hormuz tolls suggests he is struggling to end Iran war
2 hours -
ICE told to halt most vehicle stops after pair of fatal shootings
2 hours -
Xbox workers stunned after jobs ‘bloodbath’
2 hours -
US drivers may soon see pump prices climb back up to $4
2 hours -
Oil rises after US-Iran hostilities flare again with strikes on energy targets
3 hours -
Iran-linked vessels pass through Hormuz ahead of US blockade
3 hours -
Nepal court jails 2 former ministers, 14 others over refugee scam
3 hours -
Former president Sall to visit Senegal as he campaigns for UN chief post
3 hours