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IPL spot-fixing: Amendment to rule 6.2.4 is "true villain" says SC

New Delhi: Supreme Court today struck down the amendment to rule 6.2.4 of BCCI permitting administrators of the cricket body to acquire or hold commercial interest in events like IPL and champions league, terming it

PTI PTI Updated on: January 22, 2015 21:50 IST
ipl spot fixing amendment to rule 6.2.4 is true villain
ipl spot fixing amendment to rule 6.2.4 is true villain says sc

New Delhi: Supreme Court today struck down the amendment to rule 6.2.4 of BCCI permitting administrators of the cricket body to acquire or hold commercial interest in events like IPL and champions league, terming it as the "true villain" of the situation.

A bench headed by Justice T S Thakur said that conflict of interest was the one area which appeared to have led to the confusion and it gave a "serious misgivings" in the mind of the public regarding the manner in which BCCI is managing its affairs.

"Suffice it to say that amendment to Rule 6.2.4 is the true villain in the situation at hand. It is the amendment which attempts to validate what was on the date of the award of the franchise invalid as Rule 6.2.4 did not as on that date permit an administrator to have any commercial interest in any event organized by BCCI," the apex court said.

"It is accordingly answered in the affirmative and amendment to rule 6.2.4 permitting administrators of BCCI to acquire or hold commercial interests in BCCI like IPL, Champions League and T-20 held to be bad for the reasons we have set out in the foregoing paras (in the judgement)," the bench, also comprising Justice F M I Kalifulla, said.

"Conflict of interest is one area which appears to have led to the current confusion and serious misgivings in the public mind as to the manner in which BCCI is managing its affairs," the court said.

It also opined that it would not be correct to say that there is no possibility of any conflict of interest arising in IPL format between an administrator's duty and the commercial interest, if any, held by such person.

The bench also noted that conflict of interest "is not only possible but ominously looming large if an administrator also owns a competing team."

"BCCI's commercial plans for its own benefit and the benefit of the players are bound to blow up in smoke, if the people who watch and support the game were to lose interest or be indifferent because, they get to know that some business interests have hijacked the game for their own ends or that the game is no longer the game they know or love because of frauds on and off the field," it said.

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