Suspected match-fixing kingpin released from Singapore jail
One of Tan's lawyers, Hamidul Haq, said Wednesday that he had long argued Tan was being held on unlawful grounds.
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Singapore: A Singaporean man detained for more than two years under suspicion of being the mastermind behind a global soccer match-fixing syndicate was ordered to be released by the country's highest court, which ruled he was being held unlawfully.
Tan was held under a Singaporean law that allows for indefinite detention without trial if it's in the interest of public safety, but Chief Justice Sundaresh Menon of the Singapore Court of Appeal said Wednesday there was no evidence to suggest he was a safety risk.
"While. these acts are reprehensible and should not be condoned, there is nothing to suggest whether or how these activities could be thought to have a bearing on the public safety, peace and good order," Menon said as he delivered the decision of the three-judge court.
"The matches fixed, whether or not successfully, all took place beyond our shores," he added. "There is nothing in the grounds to indicate (he) was working with overseas criminal syndicates or to suggest that such activities are likely to take root in Singapore, by reason of anything (he) has done or threatens to do."
Tan's previous appeal had been dismissed by another Singapore court last year.
One of Tan's lawyers, Hamidul Haq, said Wednesday that he had long argued Tan was being held on unlawful grounds.
"It has been proven true today through the court judgment," he said. "My client is very relieved."
Introduced in 1955, the Singaporean detention law has been used against suspected drug traffickers, illegal money-lenders and criminal gang members, especially in cases involving insufficient evidence for prosecution.
Tan was arrested along with 13 others in September 2013 in a move that was hailed by Interpol as a major breakthrough in the battle against corruption in soccer.
At the time, Italian prosecutor Roberto Di Martino, who was leading an inquiry into international match-fixing, referred to Tan as the "general director of the ring."
Tan was suspected of being the mastermind behind fixed matches in Italy's Serie A and Serie B in 2011. He is also being tried in absentia by a Hungarian court for allegedly manipulating 32 games in Hungary, Italy and Finland.
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