Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Gunatillek­e in honey trap?

- By S.R. Pathiravit­hana

Did opener Dhanushka Gunatillek­e who is now in the centre of a controvers­y over the hotel room incident really did get lured into a honey trap? Former Sri Lanka Cricket’s Anti Corruption chief Lakshman de Silva thinks so.

Gunatillek­e and a male friend allegedly brought two Norwegian women into a plush hotel room in Colombo and Gunatillek­e’s friend in the meantime is now accused of raping one of the women. All four individual­s had spent the evening in one room.

In the aftermath, Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) decided to suspend Danushka Gunathilak­e from six internatio­nal cricket matches for breaching the ‘Player Code of Conduct and Contractua­l Obligation’.

Of the total six matches, three matches have been handed over for the latest violation of the ‘Player Code of Conduct and Contractua­l Obligation’ he has entered to with Sri Lanka Cricket. Whilst another three matches are given from a suspended sentence of one year, which Gunathilak­a was already serving since 18th October, 2017, for breaching the ‘Player Contract,’ on an earlier occasion.

Gunathilak­a will also not be paid the match fee for the concluded second test match which Sri Lanka played against South Africa during the ongoing tour, along with any bonus and/or other pay- ments in connection thereto.

The sanctions will come into force with immediate effect.

When asked whether there would be any implicatio­ns for Gunatillek­e over the hotel room incident, de Silva said, “Certainly now it is bound to be a case study with the ICC anti-corruption unit. The ICC anti-corruption unit keeps monitoring as who the players associate with and keep a very close tab on foreign nationals especially women whom they term as honey traps. Generally the match fixers use female decoys and lure them to do what the cricketers should not be doing.

“The same player was involved in another incident in April 2017 with regard match fixing, but in that instance he brought the matter up with the anti-corruption Unit.” SLC imposed Gunathilak­a a six Internatio­nal match suspension and a fine of 20% of his Annual Contract fee, having been found in breach of Section 30 of the SLC Constituti­on and several terms of his contract. Later the Lankan cricket authoritie­s decided to revise the suspension imposed on Gunathilak­a after they considered an appeal made on behalf of Gunatillek­w by the Sinhalese Sports Club.

The Sunday Times also asked chief cricket selector Graeme Labrooy about the current controvers­y. We asked: “Now breaking SLC’s accepted norms is becoming common place. During the West Indies tour leg spinner Jeffrey Vandersay broke the curfew rules and returned to the room the next morning sans several of his belongings which included his memory. Now in the very next series opener Dhanushka Gunatillek­e is shrouded with a much serious offence and what could you do as the chief selector”?

Labrooy replied: “Officially there is nothing that I could do as the chief selector. If the authoritie­s say a player is selected or being given the necessary clearance to be selected, it is our duty to see if he is fit and skilled to be a part of the team.

“Having said that we are a team and it is our duty to see that things work well for the national team. What I really say at this point is, that we must keep educating these players about the dangers of being involved. They even cannot bring their private masseur into the hotel room and I am aware most of the national players were not aware of that”.

He said all national players stay within a certain framework, and we work around these skills. “As

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Lakshman de Silva has a different view
Lakshman de Silva has a different view
 ??  ?? Danushka Gunatillek­e in trouble again
Danushka Gunatillek­e in trouble again

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