The issue of bringing the world바카라s wealthiest cricket organisation under India바카라s Right To Information (RTI) Act is a raging debÂate yet again. The Law Commission of India, on a direction from the Supreme Court, has given its verdict in a report: The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) should be answerable under the RTI Act as it performs certain 바카라state-like바카라 public functions and 바카라ought to be classified as 바카라state바카라바카라 within the meaning of Article 12 of the Constitution.
The Commission, in its 122-page repÂort submitted to the Law Ministry, has recommended that all the affiliated state associations of the BCCI should also be brought under the RTI 바카라provided they fulfil the criteria applicable to the BCCI바카라. So far, the BCCI, irrespective of who its top leadership has been, has fought tooth and nail all attempts to bring it under the RTI. Interestingly, the BCCI바카라currently vertically divided betÂween the Supreme Court-appointed Committee of Administrators (CoA) and its stop-gap office-bearers바카라hasn바카라t reacted officially.
But the BCCI바카라s audacious defiance can easily be ascertained from its trashing of the Law Commission바카라s invitation for discussion on the RTI issue, before it prepared its report. 바카라The Commission held consultations with various experts and stakeholders, including the Central Information Commission (CIC), on the subject. However, BCCI, despite the service of notice and reminders thereon, did not respond/participate,바카라 rues B.S. Chauhan, a former Supreme Court judge and chairman of the Law ComÂmission, in the report. Question is, can the BCCI defy the Commission without the backing of powerful people?


바카라The CoA and the BCCI바카라s professional management are all for the RTI to be impÂlemented, but the office-bearers and the state associations바카라basically, old stalwarts controlling the state units바카라are against it. All information should be in the public domain, because the BCCI is performing public functions. Let the whole world know what is going on INSÂide the BCCI and make it 100 per cent transparent,바카라 says a BCCI official in favÂour of RTI. It바카라s easier said than done, though. Former sports minister Ajay Maken, who has made many unsuccessful efforts to make the BCCI fall in line, concurs. 바카라There바카라s a very strong vested interest within it which doesn바카라t want it to be transparent, as it has much to hide, particularly financial transactions. It would resist to any extent before it would consent to subject itself to the RTI Act. The BCCI seems to be too strong, even stronger than the Supreme Court, stronger than the government and stronger than the Law Commission,바카라 Maken tells Outlook.
For now, everyone is waiting for the government to react to the Law ComÂmission report. Although it is the first time that the Commission has been asked to give such a recommendation, there is a general belief that the RTI Act would not be imposed on the BCCI, since politicians who are part of it are just too powerful. During his tenure as Union sports minister between January 2011 and October 2012, Maken made efforts to make the BCCI accountable. It is widely believed that he had lost his portfolio due to his insistence on this single issue. 바카라I tried my level best, and despite being in the Union cabinet I was unsuccessful. I will be surprised if it happens now, but I hope it happens in the larger interest of sport. It바카라s not only financial transactions, but also match-fixing and complaints about the IPL바카라they all are interlinked,바카라 he now says.
In an obvious irony바카라for politicians of parties across India are sharers in the control of cricket바카라several of Maken바카라s powerful Congress party colleagues, like Jyotiraditya Scindia and Rajeev Shukla, were in the BCCI then. In partnership with opposition politicians who had the same cricketing axe to grind, they ensured that the Board was unscathed. SuccÂessive BCCI dispensations have argued that as a 바카라private body바카라, it doesn바카라t take financial assÂistance from the government. What they don바카라t reveal is that there are several indirect assistance that the BCCI and its affiliated associations take from the Centre as well as state governments. For example, most stadiums built by state associations are on land leased at throwaway prices; the government grants concessions in incÂome tax and customs duty; free-of-cost police security is provided during all matches; government clearances enable the BCCI-selected national teams to travel abroad etc.
The fresh move to bring the BCCI under the ambit of the RTI Act has been made only because the Supreme Court, acting on the Lodha Committee report on reforms in the BCCI, asked the Law Commission provide its view on the issue. The final call, of course, rests with the Central government, which has several politicians with deep-rooted intÂerests in the BCCI and its affiliates. Politicians cutting across party lines move shoulder to shoulder in BCCI corridors바카라a bonhomie rarely seen INSÂide Parliament.


The panel headed by Justice Lodha (above) asked the Law Commission to consider the RTI Act vis-a-vis BCCI
That is why senior advocate Rahul Mehra바카라whose joint PIL with his schoolmate Shantanu Sharma in 2000 led to the Delhi High Court declaring that the BCCI would come under judicial scrutiny under Article 226 (Power of High Courts to issue certain writs)바카라is sceptical. 바카라The government will accept it only if it sees something benefiting itself, not the Indian sport. Will they accept this recommendation of the Commission that the BCCI must be immÂediately brought under the RTI? If they do then it should be done in a time-bound manner,바카라 says Mehra.
Even Guinness record-holder RTI actÂivist Subhash Chandra Agrawal fears the government would now try to delay the issue. 바카라I바카라m not at all hopeful of its implementation in the near future. Most likely, the government would now say that it would need time to study the report or consult legal experts. I say this: the Lodha ComÂmittee studied the issue, the Supreme Court studied it, and the Law Commission studied it. How much more the government would like to study it? Like all those reports over the years, this report too will be forgotten soon,바카라 he says.
Agrawal was the first person to try and bring the BCCI under the RTI Act, in 2011. As per Section 2(h) of the RTI Act, 2005, all NGOs/private bodies fall under the ambit of the transparency law if it is substantially financed, dirÂectly or indÂirectly, by the government. The Law Commission report argues that the BCCI is 바카라substantially financed바카라 by the government. Asked for its view on Agrawal바카라s application in 2011, the sports ministry then told the CIC that there were 바카라just and reasonable grounds바카라 for the BCCI to be declared a 바카라public authority바카라 as it takes 바카라indirect funding바카라 and other government assistance. To avoid becoming accountable under RTI, the BCCI successfully moved the Madras High Court in July 2013 and got an interim stay against Agrawal바카라s application. The stay continues to this day, as AgraÂwal says his old age and health have made him almost give up on the case.
Before the stay came, Maken바카라s ministry had seriously weighed the option of invoking the Emblems and Names (Prevention of Improper Use) Act, 1950, against the BCCI. Its argument: Since the word 바카라India바카라 is part of Emblems Act, the BCCI is considered to be under the 바카라patÂronage of the government바카라. But Maken was abruptly removed as sports minister and the emblem issue was not raised after that. Maken points out that his ministry had brought a National Sports Code for all National Sports Federations (NSFs); accordingly, all NSFs were supposed to be answerable under the RTI. 바카라Only the BCCI refused to do so. Following that we submitted a detailed argument for the BCCI coming under the RTI Act in an affidavit submitted to the CIC. We had also forÂmed a committee under JustÂice (Rtd) Mukul Mudgal to formulate a National SpoÂÂÂÂÂÂÂrts DeveÂlopment Bill and that panel was of the opinion that the BCCI should come under the RTI. Later, the SC said the same,바카라 says Maken.
Giving its reasons for bringing the BCCI under the RTI, the Law ComÂmÂission report says that natÂÂÂÂÂÂional team players바카라 UNIÂÂÂÂÂform contains the natÂÂÂÂÂional colours and helÂmÂets display the Ashok Chakra; BCCI nominates cricketers for the Arjuna AwaÂrds, even though it is not an NSF and ParÂlÂiament and the state legislatures have tacitly recognised BCCI as an NSF. RecÂently, the Supreme Court had observed that the BCCI virtually holds monopoly rights to organise and manage cricket in India.
Vidarbha Cricket Association (VCA) is the lone BCCI affiliate so far to accept the full Lodha Committee reforms excluding the RTI, as that was not a requirement for states. As part of transparency requirements, the VCA publishes minutes of its executive committee meetings in its annÂual report for its nearly 1,200 members. Yet, VCA president Anand Jaiswal bats for the BCCI. 바카라No doubt, the BCCI has to be accountable. But I don바카라t think BCCI shoÂuld be brought under RTI. Doing that will be like giving a stick to everyone to beat BCCI with it,바카라 he says. Rahul Mehra has a different apprehension. 바카라The Law ComÂmission report says that BCCI be viewed as 바카라an agency or instrumentality of state바카라 under Article 12 of the ConÂstÂitution. That would effectively mean that the central government of the day would be managing cricket. That can바카라t happen. However, the BCCI should be accountable to every Indian, and thus can be challenged under Article 226 in the High Court and not under Article 32 in the Supreme Court,바카라 he argues. These arguments will be thrashed out threadbare when the issue comes for hearing the next time. It will be interesting to watch how the BCCI smothers the RTI googly this time.