Sports ministry set to batter bruised IPL

May 22, 2012

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On a day when the IPL sank further into a morass of scandals, Union Sports Minister Ajay Maken revealed that his ministry had asked the finance ministry to probe allegations of the cricket league franchises using black money to regain or lure players from other teams.

Maken told the Lok Sabha on Monday that on May 18, sports secretary P?K?Deb wrote to his counterpart in the revenue department of the finance ministry, suggesting a “thorough inquiry” into the entire episode involving the alleged use of unaccounted money in the IPL for spot-fixing and other corruption in matches.

Maken’s announcement had serious implications. His ministerial colleague, Rajiv Shukla, who is minister of state for parliamentary affairs, is also the IPL commissioner.


In effect, Maken was accusing Shukla of running an operation that was tainted by black money. Adding irony to the gravity of the issue was Pranab Mukherjee tabling a white paper on black money. That made it a perfect kafkaesque day in Parliament.


“Let us leave it to the finance ministry to decide on that,” BCCI chairman Rajiv Shukla told Deccan Herald when his comments were sought on the sports ministry’s request to the finance ministry for a probe into the use of clack money in the IPL.

Shukla, however, sought to downplay Maken’s demand for bringing the BCCI under RTI, saying “he has been saying this for six months.”

The minister’s announcement was yet another blow to IPL, which, over the last week has been buffeted by charges of four IPL players suspended pending inquiry into charges of match fixing, one facing the charge of molesting a woman, and two landing in police net for attending a rave party featuring extensive use of alcohol and drugs.

“We have urged the revenue secretary to initiate an expeditious probe (into the entire episode), Maken said in the House, responding to members’ concerns over the reports of black money circulating in IPL. Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee was present in the House when Maken spoke.

The sports ministry had suggested to the revenue secretary to ask the income tax department and the Enforcement Directorate (ED) to conduct an expeditious enquiry, Maken added.

The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has already initiated an enquiry into the alleged spot-fixing in IPL after a sting operation conducted by a news channel highlighted it. It suspended five players recently from all matches till the preliminary probe is completed.

Maken asserted that the government had taken swift action on various issues involving IPL. As many as 19 notices had been issued to the IPL and the BCCI for violations of Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) to the tune of over Rs 1,077 crore and further actions were being taken on it.

On May 17, the sports ministry wrote to the enforcement directorate urging it to take early action in the matter. The ministry asked the ED to apprise it with the actions taken by it, he said.

The BCCI had been enjoying income tax exemption since 1996 on the ground of it being a charitable institution. In 2009, the IT department withdrew the exemption from retrospective effect and imposed tax liabilities of Rs 118 crore and Rs 257.12 crore for the fiscal 2007-08 and 2008-09 respectively.

“The income tax liability of Rs 118 crore for 2007-08 has been realised. Out of the total tax liability for 2008-09, Rs 131 crore have been realised and for the rest of the amount, the BCCI has gone to the tax tribunal and filed an appeal. The income tax department is contesting the case,” Ajay Maken said.

The minister, who earlier had made an unsuccessful attempt to introduce a Bill seeking to bring BCCI under Right to information (RTI) Act, reiterated his demand that the cricket board come under the purview of the law.

Maken’s reply, however, did not satisfy former cricketer and BJP member Kirti Azad, who raised the issue in the Lok Sabha during Zero hour. Kirti Azad, demanded an internal audit of the BCCI and other cricket associations in the country.

Demand transparency

Kirti Azad, who went on a day-long hunger-strike outside the Ferozshah Kotla stadium along with a few other former cricketers here on Sunday to demand transparency in the league, received support from JD(U) leader Sharad Yadav, the BJP and Left members.


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IPL players nabbed at rave party, let off after questioning


The city police on Monday released the two IPL cricketers - Rahul Sharma and Wayne Parnell (South Africa)- along with 94 others, picked for suspected consumption of banned hallucinogens at a private party held in a hotel in Mumbai’s elite sea-facing north-west suburb Juhu.


The party event manager Vishesh Vijay Handa has been taken into custody under the Narcotics, Drugs and Psychotropics Substances Act 1985 (NDPS.)


The police on Monday claimed that the raid yielded 110 grammes of banned Cannabis from the terrace of the hotel, where the rave party was going on. However, tests were on to determine the generic specification of the seized substance.


Blood and urine samples were collected from the two IPL cricketers, who play for Pune Warriors. They were released on a personal bond after being questioned. The duo has vehemently professed innocence and denied any kind of ‘narcotics or substance abuse.’


Television actor couple Apurva and Shilpa Agnihotri, present at the party venue were also subjected to medical tests and grilled. The couple has also denied consumption of intoxicants or hallucinogens in the party. On Sunday night, police carried out what it termed ‘controlled operation,’ and swooped on Oakwood Premier Hotel with windows and terrace opening to a panoramic view of waves rolling down on Juhu beach.


The swoop, Additional Commissioner of Police (ACP)Vishwas Nangre Patil told the gathered media, was carried out on ‘a specific tip-off; and it was a controlled operation wherein a mole was planted inside the rave party.’ The raiding party found 96 revellers, allegedly high on drinks and other intoxicants. Of them, 38 were women, including 19 foreigners.


Interestingly, even as the swoop was to take place, media was informed in advance of a possible raid on a ‘bash taking place in a happening Juhu joint.;’While most of the revellers belonging to upper-crust were released on bail by noon, some of them were allowed to go late in the evening.


The police has not yet charged the revellers with any of the stringent and draconian NDPS sections, but ACP Patil said that ‘blood and urine samples collected from the detained persons have been tagged.’

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News Network
January 10,2020

New Delhi, Jan 10: Injured Assam archer Shivangini Gohain underwent a critical surgery at the AIIMS. Dr. Deepak Gupta, professor of Pediatric neurosurgery at AIIMS, revealed about the delicate nature of the procedure and said there was no room for error.

"It was touching vertebral artery which supplies blood to the brain stem. The arrow was 0.5 cm in front of the spinal cord and the child could have become quadriplegic if someone tried to pull it out," Gupta said.

According to doctors, the arrow accidentally went inside the body damaging the shoulder bone, part of the neck, spinal cord and left lung.

Dr Gupta said, "Now the patient is fine. We had planned the surgery in a very unique way. Last whole night, our team was doing the planning and plotting to conduct this complex surgery. About 15 cm part of the arrow was inside the body which has entered through shoulder bone and affected neck, spinal cord and left lung".

"We started the surgery in the morning at 6 am which lasted for three and a half hours. We have successfully removed the arrow. The patient is stable now and shifted to ICU for observation," he added

Shivangini Gohain, the 12-year-old Assam archer who was impaled by an arrow shot accidentally at the SAI centre in Dibrugarh, was training unsupervised and the mishap was a result of negligence by the local coach and officials, the state's archery association has said.

The child was training at the Dakha Devi Rasiwasia College at Chabua, which serves as an extension centre under the Sports Authority of India (SAI) Regional Centre in Guwahati when the incident took place on Wednesday.

She was airlifted to Delhi on Thursday night and admitted to the AIIMS Trauma Centre. Pulin Das, a joint secretary of Assam Archery Association and executive member of the state Olympic association said the injury to the school girl from the Deodhai village, which is 3km from Chabua, happened as the trainees were practising without any coach and other officials.

“There is a SAI contractual coach Marcy and he has left for the Khelo India Games in Guwahati. He didn't instruct the trainees to stop the camp for some time nor did the college principal, who acted as administrator of the extension centre, looked after the practice,” Das said on Friday.

The extension centre has 11 trainees, six boys and five girls, and they were training under SAI contractual coach A C Marcy from Nagaland, who is in Guwahati for the Khelo India Youth Games.

“The training ground itself is in very bad shape, it was not even a dedicated ground for archery training, some play football, cricket and other sports on that ground. But the worst part is that the SAI coach did not give instructions to stop the camp for a while and the archers were training without any supervision,” he added Das said Gohain was struck by an arrow shot by boys doing practice for compound event. The arrow remained stuck for more more than a day before she was airlifted to New Delhi on Thursday night.

“There was nobody to look after the archers, they were training on their own though their parents were outside the ground. An arrow shot by a boy trainee who was doing compound event practice hit her on the shoulder,” the official said.

Gohain's father Brinchi Gohain was outside the practice area and with no official of the college and SAI coming for help, she was taken to Assam Medical College in Dibrugarh, 33km from Chabua.

“She could reach the AMC in Dribugarh only on Thursday morning. There, the doctors told her parents to take her to a more reputed hospital like AIIMS in Delhi. With help from people close to the local Member of Parliament and Assam CM himself, she was taken by air ambulance to Delhi.

“I was told that she had a very tough time as the arrow remained stuck for more than a day. She is a strong-willed girl and she fought. Her father must be a daily wage labourer and he was distraught also.”

The SAI said that it will bear all the expenses of her treatment. The Assam Archery Association has contributed Rs 20,000 towards her treatment.

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News Network
June 18,2020

Jun 18: Sri Lanka "sold" the 2011 World Cup final to India, the country's former sports minister said on Thursday, reviving one of cricket's most explosive match-fixing controversies. Mahindananda Aluthgamage, who was sports minister at the time, is the second senior figure to allege the final was fixed, after 1996 World Cup-winning skipper Arjuna Ranatunga. "I tell you today that we sold the 2011 World Cup finals," Aluthgamage told Sirasa TV. "Even when I was sports minister I believed this."

Aluthgamage, sports minister from 2010 to 2015 and now state minister for renewable energy and power, said he "did not want to disclose" the plot at the time.

"In 2011, we were to win, but we sold the match. I feel I can talk about it now. I am not connecting players, but some sections were involved," he said.

Sri Lanka lost the match at Mumbai's Wankhede stadium by six wickets. Indian players have strongly denied any wrongdoing.

Ranatunga, who was at the stadium as a commentator, has previously called for an investigation into the defeat.

"When we lost, I was distressed and I had a doubt," he said in July 2017. "We must investigate what happened to Sri Lanka at the 2011 World Cup final."

"I cannot reveal everything now, but one day I will. There must be an inquiry," added Ranatunga, who said players could not hide the "dirt".

Sri Lanka batted first and scored 274-6 off 50 overs. They appeared in a commanding position when Indian superstar Sachin Tendulkar was out for 18.

But India turned the game dramatically, thanks partly to poor fielding and bowling by Sri Lanka, who were led by Kumar Sangakkara.

Sri Lankan cricket has regularly been involved in corruption controversies, including claims of match-fixing ahead of a 2018 Test against England.

Earlier this month, the Sri Lankan cricket board said the International Cricket Council was investigating three unnamed former players over alleged corruption.

Sri Lanka introduced tough penalties for match-fixing and tightened sports betting restrictions in November in a bid to stamp out graft.

Another former sports minister, Harin Fernando, has said Sri Lankan cricket was riddled with graft "from top to bottom", and that the ICC considered Sri Lanka one of the world's most corrupt nations.

Former Sri Lankan fast bowler Dilhara Lokuhettige was suspended in 2018 for corruption relating to a limited-overs league.

He was the third Sri Lankan charged under the ICC anti-corruption code, following former captain and ex-chief selector Sanath Jayasuriya, and former paceman Nuwan Zoysa.

Jayasuriya was found guilty of failing to cooperate with a match-fixing probe and banned for two years. Zoysa was suspended for match-fixing.

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Agencies
June 7,2020

Mumbai, Jun 7: The Mumbai airport became home for a 23-year-old Ghanaian footballer for 74 days after he got stranded there due to the coronavirus-induced lockdown that led to cancellation of flights.

The ordeal of Randy Juan Muller reminded people of Tom Hank's character in the Hollywood film "The Terminal", and it ended after Yuva Sena, the youth wing of the Shiv Sena, reached out to help him.

Muller has now shifted to a local hotel and is waiting for airlines to resume operations so that he can fly home.

The Mumbai International Airport Ltd (MIAL) also provided him all help, including food, and allowed him to use the airport WiFi network to make calls, an official said.

Muller, a Ghana national who used to play for a club in Kerala, was scheduled to fly home by Kenya Airways flight when the lockdown was announced and he found himself stranded at the Mumbai airport.

"He would spend his time at the airport's fancy artificial gardens and somehow buy food from stalls and pass his time with the airport staff. Muller told me the airport staff was very helpful," Yuva Sena office-bearer Rahul Kanal said.

A security officer at the airport gave him mobile phone to call his family back home.

A Twitter user brought Muller's plight to the notice of Maharashtra Tourism Minister Aaditya Thackeray following which Kanal reached out to the footballer and helped him move into a hotel.

On Saturday, Muller thanked Thackeray and Kanal for their help.

"Thank you Aaditya Thackeray, Rahul Kanal. Thank you very very so much. I appreciate what you have done. Salute," he said.

Kanal in a tweet said when he met Muller at the airport, the latter cried with happiness.

"Have no words to salute his willpower and fight for survival in such circumstances at this age," Kanal said.

An official at the Mumbai International Airport Ltd said the footballer was provided all help.

"All personnel at the airport, including from MIAL and CISF, gave him every possible help during his stay at the airport. Besides food, he was also allowed to use the airport WiFi network to make calls. Airport staff would recharge his phone at their own expense," the official said.

The 2004 film "Terminal" of Steven Spielberg was about a man stranded at a US airport after being denied entry into the country and a military coup back home.

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