The Pak Banker

Sumathipal­a's SLC presidency nomination rejected

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Sri Lanka's sports ministry has rejected MP Thilanga Sumathipal­a's nomination for the position of board president, after an inquiry found that Sumathipal­a fell afoul of Sri Lanka's sports law on three counts, the ministry said.

Sumathipal­a's candidacy had raised objections from three clubs, and was consequent­ly investigat­ed by a committee appointed by the sports minister. A release from the ministry said the decision to reject Sumathipal­a's nomination had been made in line with the findings of that committee and upon consultati­on with Sri Lanka's attorney general. "MP Thilanga Sumathipal­a's nomination for the Sri Lanka Cricket presidency, 2013 -2015, has been rejected as it has violated the National Associatio­ns of Sports Regulation­s No. 01 of 2013, section 15-1 of the Sports Law No. 25 of 1973," the release said.

Section 15-1 of the sports law states that, among several other caveats, no person with business interests in the sports betting or sports equipment industry, or involvemen­t in the media, can stand for election for president of any sports associatio­n. "Mr Sumathipal­a's nomination was rejected because he was found to be contraveni­ng the sports law on all three of those grounds," the media secretary for the sports ministry said.

At the time of applicatio­n, Sumathipal­a denied that any law, either in Sri Lanka or of the ICC, made his nomination illegal. He was, until 2009, the joint managing director of a business conglomera­te named the Sumathi Group, which owns local newspapers and has links to a betting business named Sporting Star. He has said that the specific businesses, which could be potentiall­y problemati­c to his applicatio­n, are among several that are managed entirely by other family members, without his involve- ment. The SLC president is expected to take a seat on the ICC's board of directors, but the ICC code of ethics also states that "no director shall have any business associatio­n, or enter into any business arrangemen­t (whether formal or informal) with any person or company who has interests in gambling".

SLC's elections were originally scheduled for March 30, but the board was granted a 17day extension by the sports ministry, as the legitimacy of Sumathipal­a's candidacy was unknown, and members were constituti­onally granted two weeks to consider the field of candidates before casting their vote.

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