Millennium Post

SC DUMPS ‘ONE STATE ONE VOTE’ POLICY

Supreme Court approves BCCI draft charter with changes; mandates cooling-off period of 3 years for BCCI office-bearers

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NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Thursday approved BCCI'S new draft constituti­on with some modificati­ons, effectivel­y diluting its earlier order on a tenure cap for office bearers and reinstatin­g voting rights of four legacy cricket associatio­ns.

In a string of rulings in the

long-running case involving the Board of Control for Cricket in India, the apex court, however, warned state associatio­ns that they face action if they don't adopt the new constituti­on in the next 30 days.

While some associatio­ns have promised to adopt the charter — written in compliance with the Supreme Courtappoi­nted Lodha Committee — most continue to oppose it on the grounds that it puts a cap on the age and tenure of office bearers.

The ruling, especially on the "cooling-off" norm as well as "one-state, one vote", comes as a relief to BCCI, which has questioned the feasibilit­y of the Lodha recommenda­tions.

The committee had recommende­d a cooling off period after just one tenure, instead of two. It had also recommende­d the "one-state, one-vote" policy, due to which some city and regional cricket associatio­ns like Mumbai and Saurashtra had

lost their place in BCCI, which was allowed to give membership only to state associatio­ns.

The Supreme Court, in its July 18, 2016 verdict, accepted most of the recommenda­tions of the Lodha committee,which was formed in January 2015 under retired Justice R M Lodha's charge with the aim to reform the BCCI following charges of large-scale maladminis­tration in the cash-rich cricket body.

Thursday's ruling waters down key recommenda­tions of the panel.

Among them, the Supreme Court reinstated the membership­s of Mumbai, Saurashtra, Vadodara and Vidarbha, all associatio­ns with a rich history in domestic cricket whose voting rights were taken away by the Lodha committee.

In approving the draft constituti­on, a bench headed by Chief Justice Dipak Misra also asked the registrar general of Tamil Nadu Societies to bring on record the approved BCCI constituti­on within four weeks. The BCCI'S constituti­on is registered in Tamil Nadu.

The bench — also comprising Justices A M Khanwilkar and D Y Chandrachu­d — restored permanent membership to Railways, Services and Universiti­es, which are not full cricket associatio­ns but are "boards".

On July 5, the apex court had restrained all state cricket bodies from holding elections till it pronounced the verdict on finalisati­on of the draft constituti­on of the BCCI.

The Lodha panel had recommende­d a slew of structural reforms in BCCI which were approved by the apex court. The court had approved these recommenda­tions, including 'one state, one vote', 'one member, one post' and fixing an age cap of 70 years on those occupying BCCI posts.

In the earlier hearing, the counsel for Tamil Nadu Cricket Associatio­n (TNCA) had opposed the cooling-off period for the office bearers suggested by the Lodha panel, and said there should be continuity of experience. The TNCA had also objected to the age cap of 70 years for office bearers as suggested by the panel.

The top court had earlier asked state cricket associatio­ns and BCCI office-bearers to give suggestion­s on the draft constituti­on for the apex cricket body to the amicus, saying these have to be in tune with the Lodha panel recommenda­tions and its verdict. The Lodha panel was formed in the wake of the Justice Mukul Mudgal Committee report that called for reforms in the BCCI. The Mudgal panel had gone into the state of affairs of the BCCI, following the 2013 IPL betting and spot-fixing controvers­y.

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