ICC investigation challenges
SLC’s clean-up act:
As Sri Lanka Cricket grappled with the tentacles of politics for many
years, the ICC was not spurred into action. The decision to enquire into
government interference may have come at a time when there are signs of
positive change In 2012, while in-between administrative positions at
the ICC and Cricket South Africa, Haroon Lorgat was commissioned to
perform a wide-ranging review of Sri Lanka Cricket. “A New Dawn” was the
title of his report, which was produced after about two months’
research.

Sri Lanka Sports and Tourism Miniser Navin Dissanayake |
“A New Yawn” would have been more appropriate. The review revealed
very little that was not already publicly known about SLC. The board was
in a “weak financial position” the document surmised, while it outlined
the “lack of professional administration” at SLC, a “non-existent
organisational culture” and an unsustainable domestic cricket structure.
Perhaps the worst of all the badly-kept SLC secrets outed in Lorgat’s
report was the “strong perception of ministerial/government
interference” in board business. In particular, he noted Sri Lanka’s
“Sports Law provides for Ministerial involvement - which would breach
ICC regulations”.
SLC under State control
The sports minister has for years approved team selections before
they are announced, but this was merely the most visible of the many
government tentacles that gripped the board. Even a casual observer of
cricket politics in Sri Lanka has known that though SLC officials had
been elected, from January 2012 to March 2015, the board was effectively
in the state’s control all through those years.
The fact that the now-ousted Mahinda Rajapaksa government had stacked
virtually every Sri Lankan organisation of value with yes-men has been
laid out repeatedly in local publications, as well as in international
outlets such as The Economist and The New York Times. But it is only
now, when a new government has installed a new board, that the ICC has
suddenly sprung into action, suspending funds due to SLC, while an
investigation is launched. The new regime’s appointment of an interim
committee is the most bare-faced political intervention since 2012, but
at least this action’s goals were clearly defined, and its motives
transparent (even they were offered with a helping of the greasy
political gloating that follows most shifts of power).
An appointed interim committee was preferred to an elected board,
sports minister Navin Dissanayake said, because the committee could more
effectively “clean up the corruption” and redress the mismanagement that
has crippled SLC.
Though the ICC has, in a release, noted Dissanayake’s Facebook post -
which alleges that former ousted SLC officials are behind the ICC’s
tough stance on the new committee - reports from the press conference
that outlined the interim committee’s goals has seemingly escaped its
notice. There have been many instances of apparent political influence
on the SLC (see sidebar) that spurred no official action from the ICC in
the years that SLC was ostensibly run by an elected board.
The list is by no means exhaustive, but offers a glimpse of the
politics that has blighted the board for several years. Government
yes-men appoint yes-men of their own, and so sickness spreads to the
capillaries - the voting clubs and the smaller associations. For now,
another SLC election may do little to revive good cricket governance in
Sri Lanka, though the board must aim to reinstate the democratic model
within a year.
IC most independent
Ironically, the interim committee is potentially the most independent
board Sri Lanka has had in years, headed as it is by men whose integrity
has rarely been in question. New president Sidath Wettimuny is among the
most respected and erudite former cricketers. He has for years been
speaking sense about revamping Sri Lanka’s archaic domestic structure,
which alongside the board’s financial situation, represents the greatest
threat to ongoing excellence at international level.
Vice president Kushil Goonasekara had served previous boards sagely,
and has more recently been a leading force behind the Murali Cup - a
tournament unlike any other in the world, through which cricket aims to
bridge divides between post-war communities.
Kumar Sangakkara and Mahela Jayawardene were respected by the entire
cricket world except by members of their own previous board, but the new
interim committee has embraced them, paving their path to greater
administrative involvement. Within two weeks of their appointment, the
committee had already seen a presentation from Jayawardene on how Sri
Lanka’s domestic and school cricket systems may be reshaped. Though
disappointed by the ICC’s withholding of the distribution payment, the
interim committee is hopeful the game’s governing body will restore that
sum once it hears the new board’s case. It remains puzzling, though. The
ICC had been inert as SLC has rotted over several years, but it has
begun to crack its whip just as there are whiffs of improvement.
(ESPN)
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