Daily Dispatch

Top Lankan bigwig held for TV fraud

Chief financial officer arrested on suspicion of misappropr­iating funds

- RANGA SIRILAL and SHIHAR ANEEZ

Police arrested the chief financial officer of Sri Lanka Cricket on Monday for suspected financial misappropr­iation linked with awarding telecast rights to Sony TV, police said.

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council said this month that its anti-corruption unit was investigat­ing serious allegation­s in Sri Lankan cricket and had provided a detailed briefing to the country’s president, prime minister and sports minister.

“Following the investigat­ion the CID arrested the main suspect. He is the chief financial officer of Sri Lanka Cricket,” Police spokespers­on Ruwan Gunasekara told reporters, naming him as 42-year-old Wimal Nandika Dissanayak­e.

Dissanayak­e’s lawyers were not immediatel­y available for comment.

He was arrested after the SLC’s chief executive lodged a complaint to the police over financial fraud, the police spokespers­on said.

“The complaint says the SLC’s television rights have been going to Sony since 2013.

“At the last South African tour, this main suspect asked Sony to deposit 15% of the television rights fees to a private account in America.”

He said the amount of money misappropr­iated on South African tours was more than $187,000 (R2.69m).

“Sony became suspicious when this suspect informed it (of the requiremen­t) for a deposit of 50% of television rights fees from an ongoing England tour and it informed Sri Lanka cricket,” he said.

Sony could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

The arrest came a week after former Sri Lanka captain and selector Sanath Jayasuriya was charged with two counts of breaching the ICC’s anti-corruption code.

An official at Sri Lanka Cricket said it had given all its support to the anti-corruption team in its investigat­ion.

Sri Lanka’s 1996 World Cup winning team captain Arjuna Ranatunga said he and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe had sought India’s expertise in dealing with the investigat­ion because Indian police had a good record for probing matchfixin­g and other corrupt practices bedevillin­g the cricket sport.

“We made this request because it is not only the players who are involved in this corruption.

“There is a group behind the players like bookies and betting agents. If we get the group, we can find out the root cause of this problem,” he told reporters in Colombo after a three-day visit to India.

 ??  ?? RANIL WICKREMESI­NGHE
RANIL WICKREMESI­NGHE

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