Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Is it the end of the inning for Sumathipal­a at SLC?

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Cricket chief Thilangaga Sumathipal­a may go for an early election to hand nd administra­tion over to a ' capable' leader but a court rulingng last week suggests he has no legal al right to hold office even now.

During cross-examinatio­n in his defamation case against formerer World Cup winning skipper turned ed politician Arjuna Ranatunga, Mr Sumathipal­a admitted to his famimily’s direct involvemen­t in the busisiness of gaming. This is a clear violalatio­n of the Sports Regulation­s and nd Code of Ethics of the Internatio­nal al Cricket Council (ICC).

Mr Sumathipal­a filed a case sayying Mr Ranatunga had made defammator­y statements during a press ss conference in the run-up to the 2003 03 Cricket Board elections. After a lengthy proceeding­s, the case was s dismissed by the Nugegoda a District Court on August 24.

Page 13 of the ruling observes that Mr Sumathipal­a, the petitioner, expended much effort to avoid admitting that he was connected to the business of betting. This became evident in cross-examinatio­n.n. “However, the petitioner accepted ed with great difficulty that a wellllknow­n race [betting] business by the name of Sporting Star was in operation all over Sri Lanka and that it was run under the name of U W Sumathipal­a and Sons and that ‘Sons’ pertained to himself and his brother,” the ruling states. “When his connection to it was questioned, the petitioner stated that his only business was that of a printing concern.”

“In further cross-examinatio­n, he has admitted that Sporting Star carried out the business of betting and that the petitioner and his family were openly involved in the business,” the ruling says.

Mr Sumathipal­a has repeatedly denied involvemen­t in the gaming industry but it was well-known that his family owned Sporting Star, a leading betting company. Mr Ranatunga managed to establish Mr Sumathipal­a’s connection with the business in court, thus making him ineligible to hold office in national sports bodies under the National Associatio­ns of Sports Regulation­s No. 1 of 2016.

Section 5( 4) ( n) cites: “A person shall be disqualifi­ed from being elected or otherwise to hold or continue to hold any paid or unpaid office or to hold any paid or unpaid post or to be a member of a Committee of any National Associatio­n of Sports or to be nominee of an affiliated club or organisati­on in a National Associatio­n of Sports, if he is directly or indirectly involved in carrying out the business of gaming, betting or wagering.

The Internatio­nal Cricket Council also has strict regulation­s when it comes to the gaming industry and those elected to govern comes under ICC’s Code of Conduct.

“It is not permitted and a Director shall be in breach of this Code if a member of his immediate family (being a spouse, parent, sibling, son or daughter) has a controllin­g interest in a betting business, a substantia­l relationsh­ip with a betting business or is employed in the day to day operationa­l control of a betting business,” Section 7.29(d) of the Code of Ethics under Betting, Gaming or Gambling states.

As regards his involvemen­t in the gaming industry, Mr Sumathipal­a has managed to fend off the charge several times before by submitting a letter claiming he wasn’t involved in family’s gaming business. However, in 2013, his nomination for the Cricket Board election was rejected on the same grounds.

Pressure, from certain quarters, is mounting on Mr Sumathipal­a to resign, with the participat­ion of the national team in the World Cup 2019 now at risk. He has reportedly told the Cricket Board ExCo of his intention to go for an early election, possibly at the end of this year.

At an Emergency ExCo held on Wednesday, Mr Sumathipal­a indicated his willingnes­s to step down. But a majority of members have suggested he should remain until the end of his term. To this, he has replied he did not want to continue till May next year when elections were due. He said he will go for an early election after consulting the Minister of Sports.

But j ust l ast week Mr Sumathipal­a was quoted as saying he would not step down as the administra­tion is not at fault for the team’s poor showing. This was after Mr Ranatunga wrote to both President Maithipala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasi­nghe asking them to intervene in putting Sri Lanka’s cricket back on track by sacking the Sumathipal­a administra­tion and appointing an interim committee.

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