Manohar hits out at Modi

Mumbai, June 5 — Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) president Shashank Manohar hit out at suspended Indian Premier League (IPL) boss Lalit Modi on Saturday, saying he was trying to ‘malign the image’ of the Board and interim IPL chairman Chirayu Amin by alleging that Amin was part of the failed bid for the Pune IPL team. Manohar alleged that Modi himself had asked the bidders to get Amin to be part of the consortium.

After reports emerged on Friday of NCP chief Sharad Pawarar’s possible links with the IPL, Modi had defended Pawar and claimed that Amin was part of the consortium led by City Corporation’s Aniruddha Deshpande, who bid for the team. Deshpande is Pawar’s close aide.

Manohar said, “The truth is that it was Mr Modi himself who sent a message to the Pune franchisees through Mr Ajay Shirke, President, MCA (Maharashtra Cricket Association), asking them to contact Mr Amin and ask him to be a part of the consortium.” Modi, who has already charged Manohar and BCCI secretary N Srinivasan with bias in the ongoing inquiry into his running of the IPL, had further alleged on Friday that Manohar had neither informed him nor the IPL Governing Council about Amin’s letter seeking permission to be part of the consortium.

Making Amin’s March 17 letter public, Manohar said Amin had informed the BCCI that he would make an investment of up to 10 per cent if he joined the consortium. Amin had also stated that if City Corp won the bid, he would seek formal sanction from the Board to invest, Manohar pointed out.

“First and foremost, Mr Amin’s letter was not for asking permission to bid

After the pub brawl, cricketers crawl

Mumbai, May 26 (IANS) Six Indian cricketers Wednesday apologised to the Indian cricket board for their involvement in a pub brawl in St.Lucia, West Indies, after the team’s exit from the World Twenty20.

Ravindra Jadeja and Rohit Sharma e-mailed their apology to Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) secretary N.Srinivasan while Yuvraj Singh, Zaheer Khan, Ashish Nehra and Piyush Chawla met a senior board official and said that in future they would restrain themeselves from involving in any such incident.

In an e-mail to the BCCI secretary, Jadeja wrote: ‘I very much regret that the board has to send me a notice for the incident in the West Indies, and please accept my apology. I beg to inform you that I had gone to the restaurant (pub) for dinner along with other Indian team members. Some other guests which I presume were (of) Indian origin of USA also come to the restaurant and on seeing us they started abusing us, this may be because they were unhappy with our poor performance. We requested them not to abuse us but they did not stop despite of our repeated request. No way I was involved in any ugly brawl and I went to the pub only to have dinner with my teammates.’

Jadeja added: ‘If the board still thinks that I have brought any disrespect to the game of cricket or our board and our country, I once again sincerely tender my unconditional apology and assure you that I will take care that in future no way my name will be involved in any such incident.’

Unpaid dues: ICL officials face legal action

Chandigarh, May 15 (IANS) A court here Saturday issued notice to three officials of the rebel Indian Cricket League (ICL) for not paying the Rs.700,000 dues of a local hotel.

Chandigarh Industrial and Tourism Development Corporation (CITCO), a semi-government corporation here, had filed a complaint in the court alleging that the ICL authorities had not paid the dues of hotel Mountview where the teams had stayed in 2008.

Mountview is a five-star hotel run by CITCO.

‘Out of the bill of Rs. 11 lakh, ICL officials have not paid nearly Rs.700,000. We had intimated them through mails, calls and even sent them various reminders. But they have not paid the money till date,’ a CITCO official said Saturday.

‘They asked us provide them detailed bills that we had submitted to them before January 2010. After seeing no developments, we had to approach the court.’

Chief Judicial Magistrate J.S. Sidhu Saturday issued notice to chief of accounts department, manager accounts and assistant vice president of Essel group that started the ICL.

The court has sought their reply July 26.

The first edition of the ICL, which was not recognized by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) was held in November-December 2007.

Modi’s voluminous reply virtual chargesheet against GC members

New Delhi/Mumbai, May 15 (IANS) Lalit Modi, the suspended chairman and commissioner of the Indian Premier League (IPL), is believed to have put its entire Governing Council (GC) in the dock in his reply Saturday to the showcause notice slapped on him by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

Modi, in his reply, supported by tomes of documents running into over 9,000 pages, is a virtual chargesheet against all his GC colleagues, as reported by IANS Friday, and it turns the tables on his principal opponents in the Board as well.

Ever since the controversy broke out after he tweeted the names of IPL’s newest franchise Kochi, Modi has maintained that all decisions were taken with the concurrence of the entire GC and he might have carried the argument forward in his reply to say that if he was guilty of any wrongdoing, then all his comrades are as much guilty in okaying hem.

Modi’s reply was collated by three highly reputed companies of solicitors and a battery of lawyers headed by legal luminaries like Ram Jethmalani and Harish Salve. It was submitted to the Board by Modi’s lawyer Mehmood Abdi.

The Modi camp wants an independent panel to go through his reply, not any GC or Board member who is party to the decisions as that amounts to sitting in judgment over their own decisions.

Modi’s reply, packed sleekly in six cartons and delivered at the BCCI Cricket Centre headquarters in Mumbai, contains close to two lakh SMSs exchanged between GC members and him, thousands of e-mails, agenda papers and the minutes of the meetings, revealing the names of all those who attended and appended their signatures to the decisions.

Modi may have also demanded in the reply that an independent committee to sit in judgment over his reply, not anyone from the GC as they are all party to every decision he has taken.

Based on the reply, Abdi is confident all charges against Modi will be dropped.

‘The charges were based on allegations and gossip. BCCI can never prove its allegations. We are confident that all the charges against Modi will be dropped. In fact, BCCI president Shashank Manohar is an well-known lawyer and it will take him few hours to go through the reply. It can be done even today,’ said Abdi.

When asked to reveal the contents, Abdi said: ‘It is for BCCI to share the reply with you. But there are some interesting perspectives of the issues and controversies.’

A Board member, who till Friday argued that the suspended IPL commissioner did everything single-handedly, said Saturday on condition of anonymity: ‘If what Modi seeks to prove is correct, then the entire GC is guilty of abetment and they, too, should be suspended along with him.’

‘Going by what Modi has been hinting at from time to time, it is now clear that the decisions were involuntary for the GC members, including the three former India captains, to back off. In any case, how can any GC member sit in judgment as part of disciplinary/standing committee over his own decision?’ the member asked while speaking to IANS Saturday night.

‘The law doesn’t make exceptions for the ignorant’, he added.

Modi questioned the Board basing its chargesheet on unsubstantiated allegations, complaints and innuendos like the Kochi agreement being signed only after a directive from the Board chief, some of the deals being finalised without the knowledge of the IPL Governing Council and his holding proxy stakes in three IPL franchises.

Modi also questioned the veracity of the information supplied by a ‘reliable source,’ saying the Board has come up with ‘fiction’ to justify its charges against him, giving the information a ‘privileged and confidential’ garb.

BCCI secretary N. Srinivisan brought the very public e-mail exchanges with Modi to an end by assuring him that he could reply only on the ‘basis of the facts and documents, which have been referred to’ him in the chargesheet and not on any other material.

Modi, who was to submit his reply Monday, had sought a five-day extension and Manohar agreed to it.

Modi files voluminous reply to BCCI chargesheet

Mumbai, May 15 (IANS) Lalit Modi, the suspended Indian Premier League (IPL) Commissioner, Saturday submitted a voluminous reply to the chargesheet slapped on him by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) over alleged irregularities in the functioning of the cash-rich league.

Modi’s lawyer Mehmood M. Abdi submitted six cartons of documents, with over 9,000 pages, to BCCI Chief Administrative Officer Ratnakar Shetty at the Board headquarters here.

Abdi said a team of eminent lawyers, including Ram Jethmalani and Harish Salve, prepared the reply.

‘It has been a teamwork and we are confident that we have been successful in preparing the reply.

‘The charges were based on allegations and gossip. The BCCI can never prove it. We are confident that all the charges against Modi will be dropped. In fact, BCCI president Shashank Manohar is a well-known lawyer and it will take him only a few hours to go through the reply. It can be done even today,’ Abdi added.

Asked about the contents of the reply, Abdi said: ‘We cannot reveal anything about the documents. It is for you to impress upon the authorities (BCCI) and ask them to share the reply with you. But there are some interesting perspectives of the issues and controversies.’

‘The showcause was of 35 pages. Our report (reply) is of 159 pages and there are around 8,500-9,000 pages of written documents along with it. Two sets have been prepared, one has been sent to Mr. Manohar and one to BCCI secretary Mr. N.Srinivisan. Professor (Ratnakar) Shetty has received the documents.’

‘We have addressed all the charges. There is nothing left to be answered from our side. We want all the charges against Mr. Modi to be dropped and he should be reinstated as IPL chairman and commissioner.’

Abdi said that Modi had asked for more documents to formulate his reply but BCCI could not provide them.

‘Mr. Modi has been writing to BCCI to supply the documents that they (BCCI) will rely on. In response, BCCI provided some documents and we came back to BCCI for more documents because there was nothing new in it. Two days back BCCI wrote back to rely on documents supplied.’

‘Charges were made on Mr Modi’s behavioural conduct based on hearsay and gossip. BCCI has not been able to substantiate it. Mr Modi told BCCI: ‘I reserve the right cross examine about the allegations.”

‘He has even tried to explain the oral allegations,’ said Abdi, who flashed a victory sign before leaving the BCCI headquarters.

Shetty said he has received the documents.

‘We have not gone through the number and pages and BCCI will follow the procedures and duly respond.’

Modi’s lawyer to submit show-cause reply

Mumbai, May 15 (IANS) Lalit Modi, suspended chairman and commissioner of the Indian Premier League (IPL), will not personally submit his reply to the chargesheet slapped on him by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI).

In an e-mail to BCCI secretary N. Srinivasan, Modi said his lawyer Mehmood M. Abdi would deliver the reply to the show-cause notice with relevant documents at the BCCI headquarters at Wankhede Stadium here Saturday between 2.30 and 3.30 p.m.

Modi requested Srinivasan to depute some authorised person to ‘receive and acknowledge the documents by providing adequate receipt.’

Modi was earlier considering handing over the reply personally if the Board chief or the secretary were there to receive it.

The chargesheet, giving him 15 days to reply, was served on Modi April 26 after he was suspended at midnight soon after the IPL final. The BCCI later agreed to give Modi time to reply till Saturday.

The showcause lists charges of financial irregularity, but Modi has maintained that all decisions were taken collectively by the IPL Governing Council.

The five main charges against Modi include receiving kickbacks for allotting TV broadcast rights and manipulating bids.

‘Kirsten’s unfit’ Indian cricket team returns home

Mumbai, May 14 (ANI): The Indian cricket team, seven of whose members were declared “unfit” by coach Garry Kirsten, returned from its disastrous World Twenty20 campaign on Friday.

The team landed at the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport here after a 28-hour flight.

India, which had won the inaugural World T20 tournament in 2007, failed to win three of its Super Eight matches in this year”s tournament.

The performance has led to many questions being asked of skipper M S Dhoni and his teammates.

On Thursday, Kirsten, reportedly slammed his players for their poor fitness levels and lack of commitment.

He pointed out that even he was fitter than some of the players and gave the players a month’s time to shape up.

Kirsten also said the team was content to be number one in Tests and number two in ODIs, but had not shown enough commitment to scale the summit at the World T20.

Kirsten who has been coach of Team India since March 2008, would submit a report to the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on the T20 World Cup performance. (ANI)

BCCI grants Lalit Modi five days reprieve to file answers

New Delhi, May 10 (ANI): The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on Monday granted suspended IPL Chairman Lalit Modi five more days to respond to a showcause notice served to him on April 26.

Modi was given a showcause notice by the BCCI on charges of financial irregularity.
There are five main charges against Modi, ranging from receiving kickbacks for allotting TV broadcast rights to indiscipline and leveling baseless charges against the BCCI.

He is also facing charges of rigging the bidding of two new IPL teams, which were eventually won by Sahara and the Kochi IPL consortium and also for being a ghost owner in three IPL teams. .

Modi has claimed that he has submitted most of the relevant IPL documents.

They include all franchisee agreements, global media rights agreements, the global media rights packages, bid documents, media rights licensee agreements, eligibility letters of all bidders with details and all sponsorship agreements entered into by IPL.

The board, however, has denied receiving all documents. The BCCI”s chief administration officer Ratnakar Shetty said there are still a few documents that have not been handed over by Modi. (ANI)

Ex-BCCI chief moves apex court against office bearers stake in IPL

Chennai, May 8 (ANI): Former Board of Control for Cricket in India President A C Muthaiah has filed a case against present BCCI Secretary N Srinvasan and moved the apex court against office bearers holding stake in the Indian Premier League (IPL).

“My whole case is that I have been saying there is conflict of interest. Srinivasan has violated and there is conflict of interest. According to our rules, no administrator can have any commercial interest. Now that is being amended, so I have challenged the amendment of the rule,” said Muthaiah.

“Prior to the rules were amended, the office-bearers of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) were not allowed to engage in activities that conflicted with its commercial interests,” he added.

The noted industrialist has challenged the decision of the single-judge bench of the Madras High Court that had earlier dismissed his plea.

“When I filed the case it was only against Srinivasan. Now, I find that Pandora”s box is opened so there are so many, who have fallen in this trap of the conflict of interest so others also are responsible,” said Muthaiah.

He has also challenged the legality of the April 26 meeting of the Governing Council of the IPL that suspended its chairman Lalit Modi, accused of financial irregularities.

“There should be an independent probe, all the interested members should be out of both the BCCI and the IPL. When there is an independent member they will be able to take bold decisions. When I was the president, I took a bold decision against match fixing,” said Muthaiah.

“I was able to do it because I was quiet independent I was not involved with any player or any team or anything like that,” he added.

Srinivasan is the Managing Director and Vice Chairman of India Cements Limited that owns Chennai Super Kings in the IPL.

Tax authorities are probing the three-year-old IPL, valued at an estimated 4.1 billion dollars, after Shashi Tharoor resigned from the Union Council of Ministers being accused of using his influence in the formation of a newly franchised Kochi IPL team from Kerala. (ANI)

IPL fiasco: BCCI office bearers cannot take work home

Mumbai, May 4 (ANI): Embarrassing gaps in the IPL paper trail have prompted the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) to ban its office bearers from taking key documents home with them.

BCCI president Shashank Manohar had last week been forced to admit that much key IPL paperwork was missing.

“It is just a precaution, we have learnt our lesson from the Modi episode,” a BCCI official told the Indian Express.

Veteran administrator and onetime ICC boss Jagmohan Dalmiya, is leading the questioning of IPL finances.

According to the Sydney Morning Herald, former Indian batsman Dilip Vengsarkar is believed to have questioned the limited role played by the state associations in the franchise-driven IPL.

The private ownership of each team has created an environment rich for exploitation, with Modi having until May 11 to adequately answer a string of BCCI accusations. (ANI)

We are co-operating with BCCI, other bodies: Kings XI

New Delhi, April 29 (IANS) Kings XI Punjab said Thursday that the franchisee is co-operating with Income Tax (IT) department and the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) in investigations over the ownerhsip details of the Chandigarh-based Indian Premier League (IPL) team.

‘The franchisee, KXIP, is co-operating completely with the BCCI and all the relevant regulatory bodies. It would be inappropriate to comment beyond this at this moment. In the interim, we request media not to resort to unsubstantiated allegations and frivolous speculation,’ Kings XI said in a statement.

IT officials Wednesday questioned officials of KPH Dreams Private Limited, which owns Indian Premier League (IPL) team Kings XI Punjab. The questioning went on for nearly five hours.

Earlier, a team of IT officials visited the storehouse-cum-office of Kings XI Punjab in Mohali town in Punjab April 23 to verify some documents.

These moves were prompted by the recent controversies in the IPL over new Kochi franchise and questions being raised about the sources of its funds.

IPL boss Lalit Modi suspended – BCCI

Lalit Modi, the chief of the Indian Premier League (IPL), has been suspended for his possible role in alleged corruption in the world’s richest cricket tournament, the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) said on Monday.

The government has launched a tax investigation into the financing of the $4.1 billion sports franchise.

The scandal has claimed Shashi Tharoor, who resigned after Modi said he used his political muscle to influence a bid for a team, and rallied opposition against the government.

“The alleged acts of individual misdemeanors of Mr Lalit K. Modi … have brought a bad name to the administration of cricket and the game itself,” according to a statement by the Board of Control for Cricket in India.

Modi was suspended just after the finals of the third edition of the IPL ended on Sunday.

(Reporting by C.J. Kuncheria; Editing by Paul Tait)

BCCI appoints 3-member team to oversee IPL functioning

Mumbai, Apr 26 (ANI): The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) on Monday appointed a three-member committee to oversee the functioning of the Indian Premier League (IPL).

The members of the committee are former cricketers Sunil Gavaskar, Ravi Shastri and Mansoor Ali Khan Pataudi.

BCCI President Shashank Manohar on Monday said the Board was unhappy with former IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi”s explanation and would probe the missing IPL-3 bidding files.

“BCCI looked into charges against Modi. We are not happy with Modi”s explanation,” said Manohar.

Manohar, however, said that Modi would be given a chance if his reply was satisfactory.

“If Modi”s reply is satisfactory, we may reconsider him,” said Manohar.

“Modi will have to reply to the show cause, we will wait till his reply,” he added.

The BCCI President further said the documents related to IPL team Rajasthan Royals are missing.

“In the available document of Rajasthan Royals, there is no mention of Raj Kundra or Shilpa Shetty,” he added.

After the two -hour long IPL Governing Council meeting that took place at the BCCI headquarters here to find out the irregularities with regard to the bidding and the role of Lalit Modi in the entire episode, it was announced that BCCI Vice President and IPL Governing Council member Chirayu Amin would be the new interim IPL Commissioner.

Amin is the currently the President of the Baroda Cricket Association. He is also the BCCI Vice-President and IPL Governing Council member.

The BCCI has reportedly said that it will go public with all charges filed against Modi. (ANI)

Chirayu Amin appointed interim IPL Commissioner

Mumbai, Apr 26 (ANI): The Indian Premier League (IPL) Governing Council that met at the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) headquarters this morning to discuss the alleged irregularities with regard to contract and team biddings, and the role of Lalit Modi in the entire episode, on Monday announced that Chirayu Amin would be interim IPL Commissioner.

Amin is the currently the President of the Baroda Cricket Association. He is also the BCCI Vice-President and IPL Governing Council member.

The BCCI has reportedly said that it will go public with all charges filed against Modi.

The BCCI had on Sunday suspended Modi from the post of IPL Commissioner and BCCI Vice-President.

In the show cause notice, BCCI President Shashank Manohar alleged that Modi”s misdemeanors have brought a bad name to cricket administration in the country and to the game itself.

The show cause notice gives Modi 15 days to reply, but suspends him from participating in the affairs of the Board, the IPL, the Working Committee and any other BCCI affairs.

Following his suspension, Modi said he would reveal all about the IPL controversy, adding that the Governing Council and the BCCI were aware of all IPL dealings.

Despite his suspension, there are reports that the IPL franchisees have stood by Modi and asked the BCCI that he should be given a chance to explain his stance.

Modi had earlier indicated he would attend and chair the crucial IPL Governing Council meeting called to decide his fate.

“I will attend and chair the meeting of the Governing Council as chairman and commissioner. I have issued the agenda to the Governing Council,” Modi tweeted. (ANI)

IPL Governing Council meets to discuss Modi”s role in bidding

Mumbai, Apr 26 (ANI): The Indian Premier League (IPL) Governing Council meeting has started at the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) headquarters this morning to find out the irregularities with regard to the bidding and the role of Lalit Modi in the entire episode.

BCCI President Shashank Manohar, Secretary N Srinivasan, CAO Ratnakar Shetty and Vice-Chairman IPL Niranjan Shah, I S Bindra, former cricketers Sunil Gavaskar and Ravi Shastri are attending the meeting that began at around 10 a.m.

The BCCI has barred Modi from attending the IPL Governing Council meet scheduled today and a 22-point charge sheet has been filed against him.

In the notice, Manohar alleged that Modi”s misdemeanors have brought a bad name to the administration of Cricket and the game itself.

The notice also gives Modi 15 days to reply, but suspends him simultaneously from participating in the affairs of the Board, the IPL, the Working Committee and any other BCCI affairs.

The BCCI earlier on Sunday suspended Modi from the post of IPL Commissioner.

After being suspended, Modi said he would reveal all in IPL controversy, adding that the Governing Council and the BCCI were aware of all IPL dealings.

Despite his suspension, there are reports that the IPL franchisees have stood by Modi and asked the BCCI that he should be given a chance to explain his stance.

Modi had earlier indicated he would attend and chair the crucial IPL Governing Council meeting called to decide his fate.

“I will attend and chair the meeting of the Governing Council as chairman and commissioner. I have issued the agenda to the Governing Council,” Modi tweeted. (ANI)

IPL row: Pawar talks with Mallya, BCCI bigwigs

Mumbai, Apr 24 (ANI): Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar on Saturday met with Board of Cricket Control in India (BCCI) president Shashank Manohar, Secretary N Srinivasan and Royal Challengers Bangalore (RCB) franchise owner Vijay Mallya.

Pawar reportedly took stock of the situation in the wake of the raging IPL cash row controversy.

Top BCCI officials reportedly apprised him of steps they are contemplating to restore the board’s image.

Briefing media after the meeting, Mallya said IPL Commissioner Lalit Modi should be given a fair chance to explain himself.

Dubbing the allegations of match fixing as an ”insult”, Mallya said, “It is insulting to suggest betting in the IPL. I don”t know who is talking about all this match-fixing.”

Mallya rather found fault with the politicians who, he alleged, were raising an “unnecessary storm.”

“I think there has been lot of drama, hype and sensationalism. I would say this is uncalled for. Even our senior politicians don”t seem to understand the concept of IPL and what it is all about and they jump to conclusions,” he said.

Mallya has been backing Modi since the emergence of IPL Gate last week.

“I wish there will be a proper, calm and comprehensive inquiry and people who would read the report of the inquiry will realise that this is a storm that is quite unnecessary,” Mallya said.

The BCCI is under pressure following allegations of match fixing.

On Friday, top BCCI representatives were summoned by income tax officials and asked to furnish details of share holding, player auctions and the bidding process. (ANI)

BCCI refuses to postpone Monday’s IPL Governing Council meeting

New Delhi, Apr 24 (ANI): The Board of Cricket Control in India (BCCI) on Saturday rejected Indian Premier League (IPL) Commissioner Lalit Modi”s plea to defer the Governing Council meeting by five days, saying it will go ahead as per schedule.

The BCCI has already informed Modi that it would not change the date of the meeting as allegations of financial irregularities and the entire controversies related to IPL were far too serious to differ the meeting any further.

According to sources, the BCCI would go ahead with the scheduled meeting even if Modi decides to skip it.

On Friday, Modi had sought five days time to prepare himself for the Governing Council meeting, which is expected to take a hardstand and even press for his removal.

“I need to prepare the documents to support my replies to all the questions… I have worked for you (BCCI) for five long years without taking any money… consider giving me just five days for the documents,” Modi had said.

The “Anti-Modi” mood within the BCCI is quite clear with the entire top brass and most of the Governing Council member boycotting the award function in Mumbai last night.

Meanwhile, reportedly, the BCCI officials are also planning to skip the IPL final on Sunday. (ANI)

Time BCCI answered to India, says Gill

New Delhi, April 22 (IANS) Indicating his ministry’s intention to take a more active role in regulating cricket in the country, Sports Minister M.S. Gill said Thursday that the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) should answer questions posed to it regarding corruption in the IPL franchises.

‘It is time it (BCCI) answered to India,’ Gill said in his reply to the debate on the working of the ministry of youth affairs and sports in the Rajya Sabha.

Referring to the controversy surrounding finances of the Indian Premier League (IPL), Gill said the league was a creation of the BCCI.

‘The ministry has to lose its passivity vis-a-vis cricket,’ he said.

‘Long before I came, it (BCCI) got suddenly rich and big, and in face of passivity of the ministry, it has taken over everything to do with cricket,’ he said.

The minister asserted there was question of conflict of interest for people working in the BCCI and the IPL and cited instance of a selector who, he said, was also a brand ambassador for an IPL team.

‘You can’t be regulator, controller, owner of the team you are creating,’ he said.

Gill seemed to agree with the suggestion of some members that the government should get a portion of the IPL profits.

He said state governments were giving tax concessions to the IPL and were providing police security for the matches. ‘You have to charge from people benefiting commercially,’ he said.

He also said that liquor and sports do not go together and cited the instance of the European Football League where drinking was banned near the stadiums.

To the demand of members to regulate sport associations, Gill said he had already told these organisations that they should have clean, clear, acceptable voters lists, an independent returning officer and secret ballot.

Stressing compulsory play-period in schools, he said the current Indian policy on education was hostile to sports.

Earlier, members cutting across party lines demanded transparency and accountability in functioning of the IPL. The Shiv Sena demanded a CBI probe into the role of IPL commissioner Lalit Modi.

Congress member Jayanti Natarjan, who initiated the debate, termed the IPL as an ‘example of crony capitalism’ and the ‘worst example of corporate governance’.

‘There is a desperate need to salvage its (IPL) reputation,’ she said

‘The entire budget of the government’s panchayat ‘yuva khel krida abhiyan’ (panchayat youth sports campaign) for five years is equivalent to the amount paid by a franchise of the IPL. IPL will make a handful of people rich, grab headlines but the rural sports programme of the government will hardly get reported in the media,’ she added.

Natarajan said that both should ‘coexist’ but ‘we should get our priorities straight’.

She added that since the IPL gets lots of concessions from the government, there should be accountability and transparency in its functioning, especially since ‘there were suggestions of multi-layered interests and hints at nexus with people who have conflict of interests.’

BJP’s Prakash Javadekar said people must know of the entire shareholding of the IPL franchises, and also took a dig at Civil Aviation Minister Praful Patel over his office staff’s alleged involvement in the IPL team bidding valuation process.

‘Valuation of Indian Airlines and Air India was not done properly,’ he said alleging that the minister was instead ‘taking interest in the valuation process of IPL bids’.

‘IPL has become a global brand and players are also earning money through it but there should be transparency about its organisation structure,’ Javadekar said, urging Sports Minister M.S. Gill to exercise his authority and bring about accountability and transparency in the IPL.

Shiv Sena member Manohar Joshi said that the IPL should be banned for some years and demanded a CBI probe into the role of Modi.

‘He has earned crores of rupees. There should be CBI inquiry against him,’ he said.

Joshi said that Modi should be told to reveal names of all those who had invested in the IPL.

Manohar accuses Modi of violating ‘confidentiality’ clause

Mumbai, April 22 (IANS) Indian cricket board president Shashank Manohar Thursday accused Indian Premier League (IPL) commissioner Lalit Modi of violating the ‘confidentiality’ clause signed by the board and the franchisees by declaring the ownership stakes.

Manohar said the new IPL Kochi franchise were contemplating legal action against the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) after Modi tweeted the ownership details.

He also charged Modi with ‘selectively leaking’ the e-mail to media that he wrote April 14 asking for permission to reveal the ownership detail of the franchisees.

‘After the names were leaked, I get a communication from (Vivek) Venugopal (partner in Rendezvous) around night saying that there is a Confidentiality Clause in the agreement, which had been signed between the board and them and there is a serious breach of obligation on part of the board. He also said in the communication that they are contemplating legal action.’

‘Because of the communication, I told Modi to keep quiet with regard to the new franchise. The media pounced on Modi so wisdom dawned on him on April 14 when he wrote an e-mail to me and members April 14 suggesting that we should disclose the names of all franchise which had not done since January 2008. Then I replied that the issue is complicated and needs detailed deliberations and has legal implications and hence it should be discussed and considered by the Governing Council meeting in Mumbai. The other members of the governing council also agreed with me. Modi agreed with me.’

‘We are talking about documents that we have not seen before.’

Manohar also charged Modi that he leaked the e-mail to media.

‘Modi selectively leaked the mail. Its fine for him to leak the mail. When he has not (revealed the ownership details) done that for two years, 10 days would not have made a difference.’

I am not Modi”s saviour: Farooq Abdullah

New Delhi, Apr 21 (ANI): Union New and Renewable Energy Minister Farooq Abdullah on Wednesday rubbished reports that he is backing beleaguered Indian Premier League (IPL) Commissioner Lalit Modi.

Interacting with scribes here, Abdullah said he was not Modi’s ”saviour” or his ”hangman” as was being speculated in a section of the media.

“I am neither his (Modi”s) hangman nor a saviour. There have been charges levelled against Modi, he will answer to them,” Abdullah said.

“The Government of India has also set up an enquiry committee, their report will be given and the truth will be come out. Dr Tharoor has also asked for an inquiry to clear his name,” he added.

Abdullah further said that as a member of the IPL he too wants to know what has actually happened.

“Till all this happens, how are you going to do anything about it? Why do you call Farooq Abdullah as Modi”s saviour or his hangman? Farooq Abdullah, like any other IPL member wants to know the facts. And once the facts are clear we will know exactly what decision to take,” he said.

Abdullah claimed that he had no inside knowledge about the IPL controversy.

“Unless we meet, we have a talk about it and hear from them what is the situation, I cannot comment. This is all speculation,” he said.

Commenting on whether Modi was being unfairly targeted because of his success with the IPL, Abdullah said: “It is an old Indian habit to try and pull down someone who is going up.”

He demanded that the government to give Modi a fair chance to explain his role.

“Give him a chance to explain himself, which he will do before the Government of India and the BCCI and IPL. If he has committed a mistake, he should go,” Abdullah said.

As of now, Modi is facing the axe after apparently having lost the backing of the Board of Cricket Control in India (BCCI).

Rumors are running thick in sporting circles that Modi may exist the IPL when the IPL Governing Council meets in Mumbai on April 26.

Modi may be asked to quit voluntarily.

The Government”s crackdown on the IPL intensified on Wednesday, with the Enforcement Directorate registering a case against IPL teams under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMS) to conduct an open inquiry into transfer of foreign funds.

Meanwhile, as many as eight investigation wings of the income tax department have also spread across the country to probe the source of IPL funds and obtain financial details from various stakeholders in the IPL from across the country. (ANI)