Supreme Court allows Srinivasan to contest ICC Presidential poll

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N. Srinivasan, the beleaguered chief of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) now in exile, can now contest the International Cricket Council (ICC) Presidential election on June 27.

This became possible today, when the Supreme Court refused to entertain a Cricket Association of Bihar (CAB) plea seeking to restrain the BCCI President from fighting the polls.

A bench of Justices J. S. Kehar and C. Nagappan said that the earlier apex court order was “clear” and it will not hear the plea of CAB on this issue.

“The person, who has been restrained from functioning as the BCCI President till the conclusion of probe, cannot be allowed to contest for the post of President of the ICC,” the counsel for CAB said.

On May 16, the apex court had ordered a probe by the Justice Mukul Mudgal committee against Srinivasan and 12 prominent players in Indian Premier League (IPL) betting and spot-fixing scandal.

The court, which had asked the panel to file a report in a sealed envelope before it by the end of August, had also asked Srinivasan not to act as BCCI President during the probe.

Earlier, Srinivasan, during the summer vacation, had moved the apex court seeking modification of earlier orders to enable him to function as BCCI President for non-IPL cricketing activities. The plea, however, was turned down.

The court had said that it cannot modify the orders passed by another bench and asked Srinivasan to approach the bench which had delivered the verdict.

The court had earlier appointed veteran cricketer Sunil Gavaskar as an interim president of BCCI for managing IPL 7.

Shiv Lal Yadav was appointed as an interim BCCI president by the apex court to look after the other cricketing activities of BCCI.