Pakistan team finger-printed and interviewed on Woolmer's death
CRICKET: KINGSTON, Jamaica March 24 - The international
governing body of cricket said Friday it would investigate whether
match-fixing was a motive for the slaying of Pakistan coach Bob Woolmer,
who was strangled after his team was upset by Ireland.
Deputy Police Commissioner Mark Shields said police believed more
than one person may have killed Woolmer, 58, in his 12th-floor hotel
room Sunday. His team's humiliating defeat Saturday assured Pakistan's
elimination from the Cricket World Cup.
After days of speculation that Woolmer may have died of natural
causes or even committed suicide, Police Commissioner Lucius Thomas
confirmed Thursday evening that the pathologist had declared the cause
of death as "asphyxia as a result of manual strangulation."
Police said they were reviewing security cameras in and around the
Jamaica Pegasus Hotel and asked witnesses to come forward if they had
seen anything suspicious in the upscale hotel, where Woolmer and the
rest of the Pakistan squad had been staying. "With that many people in
the hotel it's no doubt that somebody saw something," Shields said.
John Issa, the hotel's chairman of the board of directors, told local
radio that there are no records of anyone else entering Woolmer's room
with a card key.
"The records show that no one entered because the keys are electronic
and we would have seen this," he said.
On Friday, authorities obtained DNA samples from Pakistan team
members to help eliminate potential suspects, Shields said. Late
Thursday, the team travelled to Montego Bay, on the western side of the
island, after being interviewed and fingerprinted by police.
Shields said the team would be allowed to leave the country as
scheduled Saturday. Separately, the International Cricket Council's
anti-corruption unit will investigate if match-fixing had a role in
Woolmer's death, council chief executive Malcolm Speed said.
"Our people from the anti-corruption and security unit will cooperate
with the Jamaica police, they're working with them already," Speed told
Britain's Sky TV. "If there is a link we want to know about it and we
will deal with it."
Woolmer was South Africa's coach in the 1990s when the team's
captain, Hansie Cronje, admitted taking money to fix matches and was
banned from cricket for life. Woolmer was never implicated.
The coach was last seen going to his room Saturday night after the
Pakistan team, normally a world powerhouse, was upset by underdog
Ireland in the first round of the World Cup.
He was found by a maid the next day, laying half out of his bathroom
and dressed in boxer shorts. One witness reporting seeing blood and
vomit splattered in the room, but another said he saw vomit only in the
toilet.
Police have not released details about the crime scene.
"Because Bob was a large man, it would have taken some significant
force to subdue him, but of course at this stage we do not know how many
people were in the room," Shields told reporters.
"It could be one or more people involved in this murder." Whoever
killed the affable coach gained access to his room without forcing the
door open and attacked Woolmer without people in neighbouring rooms
noticing anything amiss. Access to guest floors is restricted at the
hotel - a card key is required to operate the elevators.
"We have some theories of what may have happened, but it's too early
to go public with them," Shields said Friday on Jamaican radio.
Former Pakistan fast bowler Sarfraz Nawaz has claimed that Woolmer, a
former player for England, was killed because he was writing a book that
would expose illegal gambling in cricket.
Pakistan team spokesman Pervez Jamil Mir said Woolmer was upset that
galleys of his book had disappeared. "Bob told me the proofs had been
misplaced and he was very disturbed." Mir said. "I don't know what was
in the book but that was his only copy at the time."
Woolmer's family rejected any link between the book the death.
"Contrary to reports, we can confirm there is nothing in any book Bob
has written that would explain this situation and there were no threats
received," Woolmer's agent, Michael Cohen, read from a statement in
front of Woolmer's widow, Gill, and two sons, Dale and Russell, at the
family home in Cape Town, South Africa.
"The news from Jamaica about Bob's death is devastating. It's very
difficult for the family to come to terms with and they have no idea why
this happened," Cohen said. "Bob was a wonderful husband and father and
a cricket coach.
"He gave his life to the service of cricket and cricketers."
AP |