Business Day

India’s cricket chief steps aside for inquiry

- PRATAP CHAKRAVAR New Delhi

INDIA’s cricket chief yesterday defied calls to quit over a betting scandal in the country’s top domestic competitio­n but agreed to step aside to allow an investigat­ion to take place, the board announced.

The move, a compromise negotiated by N Srinivasan at an emergency meeting in Chennai, appeared unlikely to quell the controvers­y which has seen the country’s sports ministry call on him to resign.

Srinivasan’s son-in-law, Gurunath Meiyappan, was arrested on May 24 for allegedly taking part in illegal betting on the Indian Premier League (IPL), which is the subject of multiple police investigat­ions.

Meiyappan is a business executive for the most successful IPL franchise, the Chennai Super Kings, which is owned by 68-year-old businessma­n Srinivasan, who has headed the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) since 2011.

“Mr N Srinivasan announced that he will not discharge his duties as the president of the board till such time that the probe is completed,” said a statement after the meeting.

It said Jagmohan Dalmiya, a controvers­ial former president of the BCCI from 2001-04, “will conduct the day-to-day affairs of the board” during Srinivasan’s absence.

The BCCI met amid growing rancour among the 31-member body and a series of resignatio­ns in the previous days, including the secretary, the treasurer and IPL chairman, Rajeev Shukla. Srinivasan described his decision to step aside as “an extraordin­arily fair step”, saying the meeting was smooth and free from acrimony.

“After discussion­s, I announced I will not discharge my functions till the probe is completed. The decision was well received,” he told NDTV station. But a top BCCI official who did not want to be named said the decision was not unanimous.

“I heard Mr Srinivasan say the decision was unanimous … it was anything but unanimous and all I can say at this time is that the last has not been heard about this,” he said.

The scandal in the moneyspinn­ing IPL, a Twenty20 tournament which sees top internatio­nal stars play alongside domestic players, has again shaken the faith of fans in India’s most popular sport.

The arrest of Srinivasan’s son-inlaw came after Test paceman Shanthakum­aran Sreesanth and two team-mates in the IPL’s Rajasthan Royals, Ankeet Chavan and Ajit Chandila, were taken into custody.

All the accused have denied any wrongdoing. Sapa-AFP

 ??  ?? Gurunath Meiyappan
Gurunath Meiyappan

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