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Court tussle between BCCI, Srinivasan over

Following the instructions of the Supreme Court of India, the dispute between the BCCI and N Srinivasan over the latter attending BCCI meetings has come to an end

N Srinivasan at an ACC meeting, Colombo, January 4, 2014

After being accused of barging into the BCCI meeting in August, N Srinivasan had filed a perjury case against the BCCI secretary  •  AFP

Following the instructions of the Supreme Court of India, the dispute between the BCCI and N Srinivasan over the latter attending BCCI meetings has come to an end. While the BCCI's plea seeking clarification over Srinivasan's attendance at a working committee meeting in August has been disposed off, Srinivasan has withdrawn the perjury case against board secretary Anurag Thakur. The court, however, has asked the BCCI to stick to its stand of not allowing Srinivasan to attend the meetings due to his alleged conflict of interest.
The BCCI counsel KK Vengugopal stated that despite the transfer of shares of Chennai Super Kings from its original owners India Cements Ltd to Chennai Super Kings Cricket Ltd, Srinivasan is still involved in conflict of interest. The India Cements Ltd, while transferring the controversial IPL team ownership to a trust [Chennai Super Kings Cricket Ltd], had valued the team at Rs 5 lakh. The BCCI termed the whole process as a "sham" in the court.
Justice TS Thakur, who was instrumental in appointing the Lodha commission to set punishments for Super Kings and Rajasthan Royals and suggest administrative reforms for the BCCI, then asked the board to continue with its stand and not seek a court directive before every meeting.
On August 28, the BCCI hierarchy was unsure of the legal issues arising from Srinivasan's attendance at the meeting, and the then president Jagmohan Dalmiya adjourned the meeting sine die and sought the apex court's opinion.
As a result, in a plea filed by secretary Anurag Thakur, the BCCI accused Srinivasan of barging into the meeting enclosure and insisting on attending the meeting.
However, with Thakur's plea mistaking Srinivasan for his namesake, a chartered accountant, as a trustee of Chennai Super Kings' new owners, Srinivasan slapped a perjury case on the BCCI secretary. Both parties withdrew their respective cases on Monday.
The developments on Monday came after newly-appointed BCCI president Shashank Manohar stressed that the BCCI will not be vindictive towards any of its 30 member associations, including Srinivasan's Tamil Nadu Cricket Association.