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Galle curator banned for failure to help graft probe failure to help

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Kettleboro­ugh on the shin, forcing the official off the field.

Finch mistimed a pull to be dismissed eight overs after Warner had played Ishant on to his stumps while attempting a slog over midwicket.

Australia captain Steven Smith (51) and all-rounders Mitchell Marsh (33) and Glenn Maxwell (41) chipped in with some quick runs.

Sydney hosts the fifth and final One-Day clash between the sides on Saturday. – Reuters MUMBAI: The Internatio­nal Cricket Council (ICC) has suspended Galle stadium curator Jayananda Warnaweera for three years after the former Test player failed to cooperate with anti-corruption officials, the global governing body said yesterday.

The 55-year-old Sri Lankan, who played 10 Tests and six One-Day Internatio­nals, was previously handed a two-year suspension by his own country’s board in November for the same offence.

The ICC said Warnaweera was charged after he missed meetings and also failed to provide documents to its anti-corruption unit (ACU) for an investigat­ion, the details of which were not disclosed.

“Warnaweera failed, on two separate occasions, to attend a scheduled interview with the ACU in relation to an ongoing investigat­ion and failed to provide documents required from him in connection with the investigat­ion,” an ICC statement said.

“Warnaweera also failed to respond in any manner to the charge and he is consequent­ly deemed to have accepted that he committed the offence charged, waived his right to a hearing, and acceded to the imposition of a sanction.”

On Monday, Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) banned fast bowling coach Anusha Samaranaya­ke for two months over his relationsh­ip with net bowler Gayan Vishwajith, who allegedly approached national team players to under-perform during a Test against West Indies at Galle in October.

Sri Lanka police’s Financial Crime Investigat­ion Division (FCID) has interviewe­d wicketkeep­er Kusal Perera, spinner Rangana Herath and captain Angelo Mathews about an alleged offer of thousands of dollars to engineer a batting collapse for a West Indies victory in the match.

“The ICC takes no pleasure in imposing a suspension but this decision clearly illustrate­s what the (anti-corruption) Code means to the ICC and how seriously we take matters that relate to corruption,” Ronnie Flanagan, chairman of the ACU, added in the ICC statement.

“It should also act as a reminder to participan­ts of the need to comply with their obligation­s under the Code.

“The Internatio­nal Cricket Council has a zero-tolerance approach towards corruption and it will not hesitate in taking such decisions in its endeavour to eliminate this menace from the sport,” concluded Flanagan — Reuters

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