Follow us

SC dismisses Subramanian Swamy's plea to lift ban on CSK

no image

The Supreme Court has dismissed Subramanian Swamy's plea to lift the two-year ban imposed on IPL franchise Chennai Super Kings by the Lodha panel over the 2013 spot-fixing and betting scam. Swamy had alleged that former IPL chairman Lalit Modi was involved in this conspiracy to destroy CSK.

A Bench headed by Chief Justice TS Thakur, on Friday, rejected Swamy’s plea to reinstate Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League after initially reserving its order on Oct 4.

According to The Hindu newspaper, Swamy, in his petition, had said: “Lalit Modi, who was formerly chairman of the Governing Council of the Indian Premier League, a commercial cricket venture involving private teams started by the BCCI, had in fact successfully stage-managed and financed a so-called PIL filed by Aditya Verma, representing the Cricket Association of Bihar.

The BJP leader had also stated that he has the possession of “various communications, including authenticated emails, which are deeply disturbing, because of the alarming attempt by a coterie or informal syndicate viz., the Cricket Association of Bihar, proclaimed offender Lalit Modi, then BCCI president Shashank Manohar, and some others in Dubai to dupe the legal fraternity...”

Swamy said it was a conspiracy to let India’s cricket down. He wrote, “The petition alleged that they had, in furtherance of a ‘conspiracy, come to this Court with unclean hands with the sole motive of capturing the game of cricket, and particularly destroy CSK as well as the entire cricketing structure of the BCCI.’”

Comments

Leave a comment

0 Comments

read previousBEN vs PUN | Twitter in splits as twin arguments break out in both camps during chaotic mix-up
For all the hubbub around white-ball cricket, the stakes of a red-ball game remain unmatched for the result doesn't define the toil of one day or 40 overs but four days of sweat. Frustration only becomes natural thus when teammates fail to cooperate, as was evident in the Bengal-Punjab Ranji clash.
SC bars State cricket associations from using BCCI fundsread next
The Supreme Court has barred State cricket associations from using the BCCI’s funds until they implement the Lodha Committee reforms in 'letter and spirit'. The Bench has also asked the State units to file affidavits declaring their compliance before both the Lodha panel and the apex court.
View non-AMP page