Sri Lanka dissolve national cricket board
Decision follows after allegations of mismanagement in finances.
COLOMBO:
Sri Lanka’s sports minister said he had forced the national cricket board committee to step down following allegations of financial mismanagement.
Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage said the Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) committee, headed by former player Somachandra de Silva, was asked to resign on Thursday.
De Silva is being replaced by businessman and former SLC board chairman Upali Dharmadasa.
“One of the main tasks is to keep an eye on finances. We are in a financial crisis after the World Cup,” Aluthgamage told a news conference. “We spent more than we wre budgeted for.”
Sri Lanka co-hosted the 2011 World Cup and were left with a $69 million bill, with media reports suggesting that mismanagement by the SLC had been responsible for cost over-runs.
“The cash problem will hopefully ease a bit when we get a government grant and loan,” said the minister.
On Wednesday the International Cricket Council (ICC) launched a probe into “black marketeering” of World Cup tickets, after its Executive Board received a confidential report criticising the handling of ticket sales in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
The SLC has been run by successive interim committees – appointed by the government – for the last seven years.
On Thursday, the ministry said it would abide by a new ICC directive, requiring all national boards to be elected without political interference.
The new SLC committee’s tenure will be restricted to six-months with the sports ministry promising to hold elections in January next year.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 2nd, 2011.
Sri Lanka’s sports minister said he had forced the national cricket board committee to step down following allegations of financial mismanagement.
Minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage said the Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) committee, headed by former player Somachandra de Silva, was asked to resign on Thursday.
De Silva is being replaced by businessman and former SLC board chairman Upali Dharmadasa.
“One of the main tasks is to keep an eye on finances. We are in a financial crisis after the World Cup,” Aluthgamage told a news conference. “We spent more than we wre budgeted for.”
Sri Lanka co-hosted the 2011 World Cup and were left with a $69 million bill, with media reports suggesting that mismanagement by the SLC had been responsible for cost over-runs.
“The cash problem will hopefully ease a bit when we get a government grant and loan,” said the minister.
On Wednesday the International Cricket Council (ICC) launched a probe into “black marketeering” of World Cup tickets, after its Executive Board received a confidential report criticising the handling of ticket sales in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh.
The SLC has been run by successive interim committees – appointed by the government – for the last seven years.
On Thursday, the ministry said it would abide by a new ICC directive, requiring all national boards to be elected without political interference.
The new SLC committee’s tenure will be restricted to six-months with the sports ministry promising to hold elections in January next year.
Published in The Express Tribune, July 2nd, 2011.