SL minister defends interim body
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s sports minister Navin Dissanayake on Friday defended his decision to appoint an interim committee to oversee cricket, saying it was his “sovereign right”.The comments came after the International Cricket Council said the move may amount to government interference, and that it would withhold payments to Sri Lanka
By our correspondents
April 18, 2015
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s sports minister Navin Dissanayake on Friday defended his decision to appoint an interim committee to oversee cricket, saying it was his “sovereign right”.
The comments came after the International Cricket Council said the move may amount to government interference, and that it would withhold payments to Sri Lanka unless the matter was resolved.
Dissanayake had last month sacked elected members of Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) and appointed a nine-member interim committee, headed by former Test batsman Sidath Wettimuny, to run the sport’s administration.
“I have every sovereign right to act as the minister,” he said. “My actions are very much within our laws.”
Dissanayake added that he had called a meeting of the interim committee on Monday to chart the future course of action.
The ICC said the minister’s action was a breach of its constitution, which requires free and fair elections of office-bearers at a member board.
The comments came after the International Cricket Council said the move may amount to government interference, and that it would withhold payments to Sri Lanka unless the matter was resolved.
Dissanayake had last month sacked elected members of Sri Lanka Cricket (SLC) and appointed a nine-member interim committee, headed by former Test batsman Sidath Wettimuny, to run the sport’s administration.
“I have every sovereign right to act as the minister,” he said. “My actions are very much within our laws.”
Dissanayake added that he had called a meeting of the interim committee on Monday to chart the future course of action.
The ICC said the minister’s action was a breach of its constitution, which requires free and fair elections of office-bearers at a member board.
-
Jerome Tang Calls Out Team After Embarrassing Home Defeat -
Cynthia Erivo Addresses Bizarre Rumour About Her Relationship With Ariana Grande -
Prince Harry, Meghan Markle Spotted Cosying Up At NBA All-Star Game -
Lady Gaga Explains How Fibromyalgia Lets Her 'connect With People Who Have It' -
Metro Detroit Weather Forecast: Is The Polar Vortex Coming Back? -
Daniel Radcliffe Reveals Surprising Way Fatherhood Changed Him -
‘Disgraced’ Andrew At Risk Of Breaking Point As Epstein Scandal Continues -
Alan Cumming Shares Plans With 2026 Bafta Film Awards -
OpenClaw Founder Peter Steinberger Hired By OpenAI As AI Agent Race Heats Up -
Kate Middleton's Reaction To Harry Stepping Back From Royal Duties Laid Bare -
Rose Byrne Continues Winning Streak After Golden Globe Awards Victory -
Ice Hockey Olympics Update: Canada Stays Unbeaten With Dominant Win Over France -
Brooklyn Beckham Makes This Promise To Nicola Peltz Amid Family Feud -
Chinese New Year Explained: All You Need To Know About The Year Of The Horse -
Canadian Passport Holders Can Now Travel To China Visa-free: Here's How -
Maya Hawke Marries Christian Lee Hutson In New York Ceremony