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Pakistan, Sri Lanka and West Indies face ICC funding delay

Pakistan Cricket Board, Sri Lanka Cricket and the West Indies Cricket Board are late in filing their audited accounts and so risk delays in receiving ICC funding

Cricinfo has learned that the Pakistan Cricket Board, Sri Lanka Cricket and the West Indies Cricket Board are late in filing their audited accounts and so risk delays in receiving funding of around US$2.8m from the ICC due from the recent ICC World Twenty20.
Under the ICC's rules, any member who is late filing accounts is ineligible for their share of income from ICC events. Although the money is paid when the situation is put right, all three boards affected are believed to be short of cash and so any delay is likely to cause them problems.
The most serious case is that of Sri Lanka, who are two years behind. Accounts for the year ending December 2007 should have been submitted by June 2008, and those for December 2008 were due last month. They have not been paid any ICC monies in the interim.
Sujeewa Rajapakse, the treasurer of Sri Lanka Cricket, told Cricinfo the delay had been caused by a change in the country's administration. "SLC's auditors had completed an audit of the accounts for that particular period but by then the administration changed hands," he said. "The new board decided to look at the issue differently and conveyed some fresh observations to the auditors, which are being worked on. We expect the auditors to complete the job by this month-end after which we will submit our accounts to the ICC."
Pakistan should have submitted the accounts for the year ending June 2008 last December. A well-placed source inside the PCB confirmed that Pakistan were behind on the audits but insisted it was "a non issue". He added that the BCCI were also behind, but an ICC spokesman told Cricinfo this was not the case.
The WICB's accounts for the year ending September 2008 were due last March. Barry Thomas, the board's Chief Finance Officer, said: "The ICC requires our audited accounts six (6) months after our year-end or by March 31st (our year ends on September 30th). However, we are also required to present the audited accounts to our shareholders for their approval. Our AGM this year will be in Antigua on August 10, when the audited financial statements will be presented to our shareholders.We are forwarding to the ICC today the draft audited statements received from our auditors."

Martin Williamson is executive editor of Cricinfo and managing editor of ESPN Digital Media in Europe, the Middle East and Africa