Court halts Sri Lanka cricket vote as crisis deepens

“The court issued a stay order on the elections till June 14,” a court official said.

Published : May 30, 2018 18:30 IST , Colombo

 The Court of Appeal suspended for two weeks a vote due to be held on Thursday pending the hearing of a petition by Nishantha Ranatunga.
The Court of Appeal suspended for two weeks a vote due to be held on Thursday pending the hearing of a petition by Nishantha Ranatunga.
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The Court of Appeal suspended for two weeks a vote due to be held on Thursday pending the hearing of a petition by Nishantha Ranatunga.

Sri Lanka's Court of Appeal on Wednesday suspended elections for the crisis-ridden cricket board, whose president Thilanga Sumathipala is being challenged for the top job.

The Court of Appeal suspended for two weeks a vote due to be held on Thursday pending the hearing of a petition by Nishantha Ranatunga, who argued that Sumathipala is unsuitable for re-election.

“The court issued a stay order on the elections till June 14,” a court official said. Sumathipala is pitted against Ranatunga, a younger brother of Sri Lanka's 1996 World Cup-winning captain Arjuna Ranatunga, in the election.

The Ranatunga brothers accuse Sumathipala of violating International Cricket Council regulations by holding office despite alleged links to gambling.

READ: Cricket corruption 'goes right to the top', says Ranatunga

Sumathipala acknowledges that his family is involved in gambling, but says he has nothing to do with the business and has not violated the ICC code of conduct.

In 2016 Arjuna Ranatunga stood for vice president, but lost by 22 votes to businessman Jayantha Dharmadasa, while Nishantha Ranatunga, who stood for president, lost by 32 votes to Sumathipala.

The latest court intervention in the cricket board came as four Sri Lankans were implicated in an alleged match-fixing scandal exposed in an Al Jazeera documentary broadcast on Sunday.

Arjuna Ranatunga told reporters that cricket corruption in Sri Lanka was far more serious than alleged in the report and blamed the ICC for not acting swiftly. Sri Lankan police, as well as the ICC, have begun investigations into the allegations.

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