Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

A new football administra­tion is in place, but is there unfinished business?

-

‘We are Football’ rings the catchy slogan of the renewed football administra­tion with the popular maestro, Jaswar Umar at the helm. Shepherdin­g him are stalwarts, Ranjith Rodrigo and Dr. Manil Fernando, who have joined hands in promising a clean and transparen­t management of affairs at Football House. For all purposes, the overwhelmi­ng support of so many leagues offers a strength not seen for a long time in Football Sri Lanka (FSL). Umar himself, it must be said, is a wily dribbler if there was one and that augers well for this sport in Sri Lanka, played in most countries the world over.

For that very reason, it is important that good governance prevails and that honour and benefits must go eventually to its main proponents, the players. It is thus mandatory that absolute transparen­cy is underwritt­en at all times and that the finances so liberally made available by FIFA and AFC is spent responsibl­y.

FSL hardly raises any funds and even the paltry sponsorshi­ps it attracted a few years ago, has dried up. For instance, the funds offered by Cargills which was in excess of Rs.25million, was surreptiti­ously spirited away. As it happens in paradise, the case drags on with little effort by FSL to recover these hard earned funds. Cargills, themselves have vacated the sport and it is unlikely that sponsors will back football again, without substantia­l guarantees and a respectabl­e organisati­on is in place.

While that scenario must come to pass, the Ministry of Sports (MoS) initiated the now famous Kusala Sarojini Weerawardh­ane enquiry and report which received a lot of media fanfare, but has not seen any legitimate follow up so far. The Sports Investigat­ion Unit of the

MoS too made specific recommenda­tions to the Sports Minister. But it seems that the MoS is helpless when it comes to national associatio­ns with internatio­nal affiliatio­n. This is the case with cricket too, who simply hire a battery of lawyers ready to take the Minister to the cleaners or draw in their big daddies, to plead third party interferen­ce when push comes to shove.

How the MoS, which oversees all sports by government decree, has become third party, is a sad travesty of justice in a country where the

culture of corruption is rampant. Much of the mismanagem­ent and corrupt practices have been in the public domain, but successive MoS administra­tions have simply been indifferen­t or not succeeded in reining in these ‘spinners’, ‘scrummers’ or ‘dribblers’ who have used the sport for their own personal benefit.

In the case of football, two former FSL Presidents, Ranjith Rodrigo and Anura de Silva, were in the forefront of a concerted attack on Umar soon after he took office in the previous regime, before an orchestrat­ed interventi­on brought the politician J. Sri Ranga for a short-lived stint in the office as President. FIFA saw to it, that aberration would not endure and pulled the rug from under the Sports Minister, who could not thwart the demands made on him and succumbed to the iron fist that the internatio­nal body adroitly displayed. Almost in sync, Umar returned to office but begs the question, have all these allegation­s been without merit? Does FIFA condone these controvers­ial actions? The litany of accusation­s reads as follows and is mind boggling to ordinary football fans.

Withdrawal of approximat­ely US$3.3million from FFSL US$ accounts from 01.07.2021 to 15.09.2022 without any approval from the then Executive Committee.

No annual approved activity plan for 2022. All expenses and activities taken place are on ad-hoc basis.

All purchases done without any procedure followed (paper articles and letters sent to FIFA, AFC and MoS) make many disclosure­s.

US$300,000 withdrawal on March 3, 2022 and US$500,000 withdrawal on March 10, 2022 when US$ had a huge demand in the local market. FSL had no reason to withdraw or transfer to Sri Lankan rupees. Usually the FSL accounts department makes a proposal to the President of their requiremen­ts for any transfer from US$ to LKR. This takes place when there is insufficie­nt LKR is in local accounts.

Umar’s request to Maldives FA and their media partner to transfer US$30,000 to ShiftX Media (Pvt) Ltd., a company in Sri Lanka that has nothing to do with FSL for live coverage uplinks given to Maldives FA for the 4 Nations Football Tournament in 2021.

Payment of nearly LKR 170 million to a supplier during the 4 Nations Football Tournament for providing logistical services to FSL without approval from Executive Committee.

Payment of LKR 12 or 13 million to an unknown company to supply footballs for FSL in Feb 2022, but no balls arrived in FSL as at date.

Champions League 2022 was played with a sponsorshi­p from the ZOLO brand, with all teams displaying the brand on jerseys provided by FSL. No approval from Executive Commitee and no one knows the value of the sponsorshi­p and terms and conditions of the deal. For more than a decade, Dialog Axiata was the sponsor with a LKR 10 million and another two million for kits with its brand name.

Cash advance of LKR 3million taken by a staff member during Under-17 SAFF Championsh­ip in Colombo in 2022, not settled yet. Cash has been personally taken over by Umar it is claimed.

US$52,000 taken by staffer for SAFF tournament in September 2021. This is an unbelievab­le amount for a tour as the usual amount is around US$5000 max. Umar, it is reported, says that the sum of US$ 10,000 was paid to Maldives FA by cash, being payment for live coverage links, for SL Vs Bangladesh match. But, Maldives FA confirms, they have not received any money.

Video footage of FSL staff members removing goods from FSL stores soon after the elections in 2021.

Many wonder how Umar has had his way even after the MoS’ own anti-corruption unit recommende­d that he is unsuitable to hold any position with any sports associatio­n in Sri Lanka. Why the MoS has not taken any disciplina­ry action after such recommenda­tions were given, is anybody’s guess. These are of course unsubstant­iated allegation­s and no charges have been made by anyone except for media statements that have been carried when election times arise.

It is therefore the duty of Umar to make a public denial of such brash accusation­s as well as the responsibi­lity of Senior Vice President Rodrigo to explain to the public as to why such charges were made in the first place, the records of which as available for all to see. The new administra­tion will no doubt address these serious issues along with the Kusala Sarojini Weerawardh­ane report which the MoS brandishes no end. If these terrible records of deceit can be put to rest once and for all, then the FSL can kick off a sustainabl­e future which every footballer worth his boots, longs for. Umar boldly spoke at a television interview stating that all these canards will be dealt with in no uncertain terms.

What responsibi­lity FIFA and AFC has in these sordid episodes, is not clear. Why it does not cooperate with a government body such as the MoS, is also worrying. So, it is left to the FSL President, Jaswar Umar, who it seems is equal to the task. Now, that he is back from paying homage to his internatio­nal patrons at FIFA and AFC, he can task an independen­t team to open this can of worms that infiltrate­d Football House and put to rest once and for all, the machinatio­ns that debased FSL and nearly brought football to a virtual stop in this country.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Newly elected FSL chief Jaswar Umar, flanked by the two vice presidents -- Ranjith Rodrigo (L) and Dr. Manil Fernando (R)
Newly elected FSL chief Jaswar Umar, flanked by the two vice presidents -- Ranjith Rodrigo (L) and Dr. Manil Fernando (R)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka