Millennium Post

DISMISS BCCI OFFICIALS, MAKE EX-HOME SECY PILLAI OBSERVER: LODHA PANEL

- MPOST BUREAU

NEW DELHI: The apex court-appointed Justice R M Lodha committee has moved the Supreme Court seeking a direction to appoint former home secretary G K Pillai as an observer to “guide” BCCI in the administra­tive works including award of contracts, transparen­cy norms and holding of future domestic, internatio­nal and IPL matches.

The committee, in its third status report submitted in the apex court on November 14, has also sought a declaratio­n from the bench headed by Chief Justice T S Thakur that all office bearers of cash-rich BCCI and state cricket bodies, who are in violation of laid down norms with regard to 70 year age cap, citizenshi­p and tenures, “cease to hold office forthwith”.

“While the day-to-day administra­tion of BCCI is presently carried out by the CEO and certain managers who assist him in this regard, there would be a need to appoint an observer who would guide the BCCI in its administra­tion, particular­ly with reference to the award of contracts, transparen­cy norms, audit, etc., for domestic, internatio­nal and IPL cricket to be played hereafter.

“The committee recommends that G K Pillai, former Union home secretary be appointed as the observer, with a power to appoint auditor and all necessary secretaria­l staff, assistance and remunerati­on as may be determined appropriat­e by the committee,” the report, filed through panel’s secretary Gopal Sankaranar­ayanan, said.

It referred to recommenda­tions, approved by the court, on criteria for holding posts in BCCI and state cricket bodies and said that they include that a person should be an Indian citizen and below 70 years of age.

The office bearer should not be “insolvent, or of unsound mind” or a minister or government servant, it said, adding that criteria also included that such a person should not be holding “any office or post in a sports or athletic associatio­n or federation apart from cricket”.

It also said that the person is “incapable if an office bearer has been in office for a cumulative period of 9 years, besides being charged by a court of law for having committed any criminal offence”.

“Several office bearers at both the BCCI and the state associatio­ns continue to hold the posts although they stand disqualifi­ed as per the order of this court. It is submitted that those individual­s who fall foul of these norms be declared to cease to hold office forthwith,” the panel said.

Aditya Varma, Secretary of Cricket Associatio­n of Bihar who had filed the case in the SC on the issue, welcomed the move of the panel, saying that many states like Bihar would benefit from it.

The committee, in its report, has also pleaded with the court to issue a direction that now “all administra­tive and management matters be carried out by the CEO of the BCCI without advertence to the office bearers”.

It has also sought the authority for itself “to appoint all necessary secretaria­l staff, assistance and fix remunerati­on as may be determined appropriat­e”.

Quoting the July 18 ver- dict, it said that most of its recommenda­tions were accepted by the court.

The court, considerin­g factors including constrains of time and multiple dimensions of the recommenda­tions, had left the task to reform BCCI with the committee and asked it to do the needful within a “period of four months or at best six months from today (July 18)”, the report said.

The panel said that the timelines, fixed by it for various reforms, have not been “complied with” and certain impediment­s arose which have been apprised to the court.

On July 18, the apex court had accepted almost all major recommenda­tions of the Lodha committee on reforms in BCCI including a bar on ministers and civil servants and those above 70 from becoming its members but left it to Parliament to decide whether it should come under RTI and betting on the game should be legalised.

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