STEWART Regan has revealed the Scottish football authorities have become even more vigilant about possible corruption since a number of high- profile arrests in England last month.

SFA chief executive Regan insisted there was no evidence of any organised wrongdoing in the Scottish game, but admitted it was impossible to guarantee that the scene was entirely clean.

He helped launch an anti-corruption initiative called "Keep It Clean" at Hampden yesterday.

An integrity hotline has been created allowing players, coaches, match officials, club officials and football administration staff to anonymously flag up any concerns and suspicions they have about issues such as match-fixing, betting patterns or doping.

The campaign was launched in conjunction with the independent charity Crimestoppers.

Last month Blackburn striker DJ Campbell became the biggest name in British football to be arrested in an English match-fixing scandal.

Six men were arrested including former Portsmouth star Sam Sodje and his brother Akpo, who had a season with Hibs in 2011.

When asked if he could be certain that the Scottish game was untainted, Regan said: "Who knows?

"We have no evidence at all to suggest Scotland has got any problems of the kind of match-fixing or integrity levels that we're talking about.

"We've got to separate our betting [issues] from match-fixing and spot-fixing, they are very different things."

Rangers midfielder Ian Black and Ayr United striker Michael Moffat have both faced SFA charges for breaking rules by betting on football.

Black was given a 10-game suspension, with seven of them suspended, while Moffat's hearing is on January 16.

But Regan stressed that betting was an entirely separate issue from match-fixing.

He said: "Betting isn't allowed under the Scottish FA rules. We're working with the league bodies and PFA Scotland to make sure that message constantly is reminded to the people that need to know it. From a match-fixing and spot-fixing point of view there isn't any evidence of it but you can't be complacent just because there's no evidence.

"When we see arrests being made close to home your antennae starts to kick in and you start to think, 'well, what do we need to do to make sure it doesn't come into Scotland?'

"We pride ourselves on the reputation of the Scottish game.

"We've got a great reputation in that regard and we've got no evidence of anything like that happening despite allegations being made and accusations being made."