By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Media HydeMedia Hyde
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Blogs
  • Business & Commerce
  • Others
    • Religious
    • Metropolitan
    • Climate and Weather
Font ResizerAa
Media HydeMedia Hyde
Font ResizerAa
  • Home
  • Politics
  • Education
  • Entertainment
  • Sports
  • Blogs
  • Business & Commerce
  • Others
    • Religious
    • Metropolitan
    • Climate and Weather
Follow US
© 2026 Media Hyde Network. All Rights Reserved.
Sports

Four charged in BCB corruption probe; domestic player among those named

Last updated: May 7, 2026 9:47 pm
Ayan Ahmed
Share
SHARE

 

The Bangladesh Cricket Board (BCB) has officially charged four individuals following an extensive internal investigation into spot-fixing and corrupt practices within the domestic circuit. The list includes at least one active domestic player, marking a significant escalation in the board’s attempt to curb match-fixing allegations that have long shadowed the country’s lower-tier leagues.

While the board has kept the identities of the accused under wraps pending formal hearings, sources close to the Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU) confirm that the charges stem from suspicious activity recorded during the most recent season of the Dhaka Premier League and the Bangladesh Cricket League.

The move follows months of surveillance. The ACU gathered digital evidence and witness accounts linking the four individuals to unauthorized bookmakers. For the BCB, this is a damage-control exercise. The integrity of domestic cricket has been under fire for years, with players frequently reporting approaches by fixers—often with little follow-up from the governing body. This time, the board is pushing for a public show of accountability.

“We have zero tolerance for these activities,” said a senior BCB official, speaking on condition of anonymity. “The investigation was thorough. We aren’t just looking at the players; we are looking at the entire ecosystem that allows these fixers to operate.”

The accused face potential lifetime bans if the disciplinary committee finds the evidence conclusive. The domestic player in question has been provisionally suspended, barred from all team activities and training facilities until the board releases its final verdict.

Critics argue that the board’s focus on these four individuals ignores the systemic failures that make domestic players vulnerable in the first place. With salary delays and lack of job security, many cricketers find themselves in precarious financial positions—prime targets for those offering quick payouts.

The BCB’s disciplinary committee is expected to begin formal hearings early next week. For now, the board remains tight-lipped, focusing on the legal framework required to ensure the charges stick.

Whether this purge actually cleans up the game remains the question on every fan’s mind. The board is promising a crackdown, but in a system where corruption has deep roots, one set of charges is rarely enough to break the cycle.

Share This Article
Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Masood bets on pace as Pakistan eyes aggressive start against Bangladesh
Next Article Education Support Program Jamaat-e-Islami Starts Education Relief Initiative for Needy Families in Karachi
Leave a Comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Sponsored Ads

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
WhatsAppFollow
ThreadsFollow
Sindh Schools to Close for Two-Month Summer Break Starting June 1
Sindh Schools to Close for Two-Month Summer Break Starting June 1
Education
May 13, 2026
Pakistan Targets Tech Workforce with 20,000 AI Training Slots
Pakistan Targets Tech Workforce with 20,000 AI Training Slots
Education
May 13, 2026
Tokyo University Launches Fully Autonomous Lab Where Robots Run the Show The lights are on at the University of Tokyo’s newest chemistry lab, but the lab coats are gone. In a move that signals a shift for experimental science, the university has officially opened a facility where robots handle the entire research cycle—from mixing chemicals to analyzing results—without a single human in the room. This isn’t just a room with a few automated arms. It’s a closed-loop system designed to hunt for new materials for batteries and semiconductors at speeds that make traditional methods look like they’re standing still. The AI designs the experiment, the robots execute it, and the data feeds right back into the AI to decide what happens next. "The goal is to remove the bottleneck of human physical labor," a researcher involved in the project’s pilot phase said. "A human can do maybe ten experiments a day. This system won't stop at ten, and it doesn't need to go home at 5:00 PM." The stakes are high. Japan is currently locked in a global race to find more efficient materials for the next generation of electric vehicle batteries. By cutting humans out of the "pipette-and-wait" cycle, the university expects to compress years of trial-and-error into a few weeks of non-stop robotic iteration. It’s a response to a looming crisis, too. Japan’s shrinking workforce means there are fewer young scientists entering the field every year. Automating the grunt work isn't just about speed; it’s about survival in a country where human talent is becoming a scarce resource. Critics often worry that "robot-run" means "job-lost," but the university’s lead engineers argue the opposite. They say the move frees up researchers to actually think, rather than spending eight hours a day performing repetitive liquid handling. The robots don't get bored, they don't make clerical errors, and they don't suffer from "Friday afternoon" fatigue that can ruin a data set. The lab is currently focused on thin-film materials, but the team plans to scale the technology to other branches of chemistry soon. If it works, the image of the lone scientist hunched over a workbench might soon be a relic of the past. The lab is running right now. It’ll be running tomorrow morning. And it won't need a coffee break to get through the night.
Tokyo University Launches Fully Autonomous Lab Where Robots Run the Show
Education
May 13, 2026
Pakistan Offers New Higher Education Scholarships to Bangladeshi Students
Pakistan Offers New Higher Education Scholarships to Bangladeshi Students
Education
May 13, 2026
Private Schools Defy Punjab Government’s Revised Summer Vacation Schedule
Private Schools Defy Punjab Government’s Revised Summer Vacation Schedule
Education
May 13, 2026
HEC Drops Paperwork: Fully Online Degree Attestation Goes Live Nationwide
HEC Drops Paperwork: Fully Online Degree Attestation Goes Live Nationwide
Education
May 13, 2026

You Might Also Like

Sports

Headline: Sajid Khan slams Peshawar region’s T20 selection bias

By
Ayan Ahmed
Tri-Series: Proposal to Rest Babar Azam in Today’s Match
Sports

Tri-Series: Proposal to Rest Babar Azam in Today’s Match

By
Niaz Ali
HeadlineSports

Shadab Khan Eyes Big Comeback — Ready for BBL Showdown with Babar Azam

By
Salman Khan
Lyon 'humbled' after moving past childhood hero McGrath
Sports

Lyon ‘humbled’ after moving past childhood hero McGrath

By
Niaz Ali
Media Hyde Media Hyde Dark
Facebook Twitter Youtube Rss Medium

About US

Media Hyde Network: Your instant connection to breaking stories and live updates. Stay informed with our real-time coverage across politics, tech, entertainment, and more. Your reliable source for 24/7 News.

Top Categories
  • Headline
  • Politics
  • Entertainment
  • Education
  • Sports
  • Religious
  • Metropolitan
  • Climate and Weather
Usefull Links
  • Contact Us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies Policy
  • Advertising Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

© 2025 Media Hyde Network. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?