Deccan Chronicle

IPL TIES TO FACE CAUVERY HURDLE IN TN

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

A police officer and a few fringe groups are opposing season 11 of cash-rich IPL cricket.

In a plea before the Madras high court, IPS officer G. Sampathkum­ar sought a stay on the league, slated to start on April 7, because of what he claims is lack of preventive measures and infrastruc­ture to stop match fixing and betting. A few fringe elements among Tamil groups protesting on the Cauvery issue are asking if matches should be held in Tamil Nadu at this time when the state is up in arms over the non-formation of the Cauvery Management Board.

The matches are expected to be played as scheduled even in the face of stray opposition in Tamil Nadu and elections in Karnataka.

A police officer and a few fringe groups are opposing season 11 of cash-rich IPL cricket.

The MJK chief and sitting MLA M. Thamimun Ansari asked if IPL matches were needed when “farmers are shedding tears and people are yearning for drinking water.”

Once assigned to probe the betting and spot and match-fixing in the IPL five years ago, the police officer Sampathkum­ar has said in his plea, “Contrary to the Lodha Committee report, vested interests still continue to be protected in the IPL and the questions of conflict of interest remain unaddresse­d by the BCCI.”

While saying he did not want a ban on IPL, he accused the CID of the State police of trivialisi­ng match-fixing allegation­s and converting the case into an offence under the Gaming Act and letting it lie without investigat­ing it deeply.

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