Hindustan Times (Gurugram)

Go by Lodha panel, SC tells BCCI

- Bhadra Sinha bhadra.sinha@hindustant­imes.com

Lawyers like you get better with age, is that so with cricketers too? I don’t know. We feel 70 is a good age for retirement. At 70, they should sit at home and watch cricket on TV.

SC TO KK VENUGOPAL WHO OBJECTED TO AGE CEILING FOR ADMINISTRA­TORS

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court made it clear on Thursday that the BCCI could not “prolong or filibuster” the Lodha panel’s recommenda­tions to change the cricket board’s functionin­g, including bringing it under the right to informatio­n law and making it accountabl­e to the Comptrolle­r and Auditor General.

A bench headed by chief justice TS Thakur also directed the board to furnish details of funds it released to state cricket bodies in the past five years and asked it to explain whether there was any mechanism to monitor their expenditur­e.

“This is the easiest way to pro- long and filibuster it (implementa­tion of the recommenda­tions). All of you (state cricket bodies and the BCCI) knew of the hearing before the panel and none of you approached it. But, you all have come here now with your grievances,” the bench told the BCCI counsel and lawyers of various state associatio­ns who moved court with their objections to the panel’s recommenda­tions. The bodies have requested the top court to refer the matter back to justice RM Lodha for a review.

Not giving a firm opinion on the plea, the court simply remarked, “It’s an expensive panel. The exercise has cost the BCCI a lot of money.” The bench, also comprising justice FMI Kalifullah, however, added that either the court would examine the issues completely or ask justice Lodha to have a re-look at selective points. The court will continue the hearing on March 18.

As it be gan hearing the BCCI’s counsel, the court found it strange for the board to bat for ministers and bureaucrat­s holding posts in the cricket body — a practice the Lodha panel has advised to stop — but oppose the inclusion of a CAG official on the grounds that it could lose its ICC membership for government interferen­ce.

“You want the minister to be in the board but no CAG official. Won’t a minister or bureaucrat’s presence make you lose ICC membership? We know NKP Salve was the president of the board. But, that doesn’t mean it should become a practice,” the bench said.

The bench asked the board uncomforta­ble questions on release of funds. BCCI counsel KK Venugopal argued it was not possible to reduce advertisem­ents during telecast of matches as that was a source of income the board needed to fund state bodies.

Venugopal informed the court that in 2015, the BCCI earmarked Rs 480 crore for each of its affiliated state boards. But, he had no reply to the bench’s query if the board monitored the expenses incurred by state bodies.

“Or is this your way of getting votes? You give money to a state body and do not ask for the accounts. That is the finding of the committee (the Lodha panel),” the CJI said.

V enugo pal argued the money was spent mostly on infrastruc­ture and cricketing activities, prompting the court to seek the amount spent by the BCCI during the past five years for developmen­t of the game in smaller states such as Manipur, Meghalaya, Nagaland and Assam.

The top court remained unconvince­d with the BCCI’s plea to let people above 70 years of age hold posts in the board. “People at 70 should sit at home and watch the game,” justice Thakur said.

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