The Board of Control for Cricket in Sri Lanka (BCCSL) faces the prospect of
a possible legal dispute with Taj Television, a Dubai-based sports
broadcaster, if it fails to recognise a three-year television and
sponsorship contract signed in October 2001.
According to BCCSL sources, the executive committee is close to an agreement
that will see the Singapore-based WSG Nimbus reinstated as the BCCSL's
television and sponsorship rights holder for the forthcoming England tour of
Sri Lanka.
But Taj Television, who have already sold television feeds to Sky Sports for
the series, and are currently selling the title and other sponsorship
rights, are adamant that their contract, due to run until 2004, cannot just
be brushed aside. "We have a contract with the BCCSL that is legal and
binding," said Jude de Valliere, spokesman for Taj Television, in Colombo.
The deal being brokered is designed to save the BCCSL from a potentially
crippling US$11 million damages claim after a Singapore arbitration court
ruled that the board - led at that time by a government-appointed interim
committee - had cancelled a contract with WSG Nimbus "unlawfully and
illegally" in 2001 for allegedly missing payment deadlines.
"What we are hopeful to do is reduce the US$11 million damages claimed on us
and ensure that future matches are televised," Mohan de Silva, the BCCSL's
secretary, told AFP. "The talks have been going very well and we are hopeful of
reaching an amicable settlement within a week."
The BCCSL is expected to argue that the Taj Television contract is "null and
void" because it was not signed with a properly elected executive
committee - even though the interim committee, which had sought the advice
of the Attorney General, had been invested with government authority.