One of the most scathing judgments on Indian sports administration was delivered in May 2014. Justices Ravindra Bhat and Najmi Waziri of the Delhi High Court used some extremely strong words to lambast and ridicule sports administrators in a case involving the contentious National Sports Code. 바카라Sport administration, the way it is run in India, thrÂÂough coteries, cabals, manipulations and intrigues, seems to discourage a vast majority of the population to devote itself to athletics, shooting, judo, table-tennis, gymnastics, soccer, boxing, fencing and the like,바카라 wrote Justices Bhat and Waziri in their judgment.
The Indian Olympic Association (IOA) had earlier filed a writ petition against the Union of India, saying certain provisions of the code was beyond the jurisdiction of the government. The two judges dismissed it with the landmark, 78-page judgment.
However, a ruling excoriating 바카라cabals바카라 is one thing; changing matters on the groÂund is another. In the five-and-a-half years since, little has chanÂged바카라examples are the constant squabbles between the government and the IOA/national sports federations (NSFs). As the three main recalcitrant protagonists바카라each backed by vested interest groups (often influential politicians)바카라try their best to avoid transparency, accountability, and conflict-of-interest judicial scrutiny, the courts, Supreme Court downwards, are seized with cases on these vital issues.
While the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is desperate to circumvent the Lodha Committee-drafted and SC-approved model constitution, the IOA is fighting tooth and nail to deflect a similar attempt for reforms through the sports ministry-promulgated National Code for Good Governance in Sports 2017, though it바카라s still in a draft stage. While the BCCI has amended/dilÂuted key elements and is awaiting the SC nod for it, advocate-activist Rahul Mehra has been fighting almost a single-handed batÂÂtle with the IOA and the NSFs in the SC and Delhi High Court, seeking transparency and accÂountability from officialdom.
A resolution is nowhere in sight; the cases are mired in stalemate. The reason is the resistance offered by individuals, including heavyweight politicians/businessmen. Why do sports hold such an attÂraction for politicians? 바카라It바카라s very simple: sports administration has power, infÂluence, and offers glamour바카라Š. That바카라s why they cling on to their posts,바카라 former Chief Justice of India Rajendra Mal Lodha tells Outlook.
Ironically, politicians play a crucial role forming rules that govern sports 바카라itself a conflict-of-interest issue. Still, the NatiÂonal Sports Development Bill, 2013 and the Sports Code for Governance in SpoÂrts, 2017 are hanging fire for years, with administrators resisting change and refÂusing to embrace transparency.
While the first government-formed guidelines for NSFs came in September 1975, in the next 44 years, India has not been able to agree to a permanent set of regulations. After 1975, the guidelines were revised in 1997 and issued in 2001. It led to an outcry by the IOA/NSFs against certain stipulations. The government buckled under pressure, then prepared a draft policy in 2007, but that too was stalled by influential people. Separately, the Ajay Maken-headed sports ministry in August 2011 placed a draft of the National Sports DevelopÂment Bill before the Cabinet, which promptly rejected it.
Then, a National Sports Development Code was introduced in 2011. In 2017, a strong code was drafted by a committee that comprised prominent sportspersons like Abhinav Bindra and Prakash Padukone. The nine-member panel incÂluded Narinder Batra, now president of the International Hockey Federation and the IOA. When he signed the 2017 draft code he was associate vice president of the IOA. But now, the IOA headed by him has rejected the same.
The IOA바카라s main objections are: age limit of 70 years for officials, tenure cap, cooling-off period, bar on politicians/government servants, bar on immediate relatives of officials, audit of accounts, mandatory representation of athletes in governance and bar on voting right of state Olympic bodies. After the IOA/NSFs rejected the 2017 draft code, the ministry recently constituted a 13-member committee to 바카라review바카라 it. But Mehra successfully secured a stay from the Delhi HC, citing conflict-of-interest cases related to the panel members. The next hearing is on February 14.
Mehra feels all parties바카라the IOA, NSFs, BCCI, Union sports minister Kiran RijÂiju and the Centre바카라are hand in glove in a bid to water down the code. 바카라BCCI and IOA, with tacit support from the minister, intends not to implement an effÂective and transparent sports code, and is bent on diluting it by making the age and tenure restrictions meaningless and giving career-politicians and others a free run in the NSFs,바카라 he charges.
Athletics Federation of India president Adille Sumariwalla disagrees. 바카라The spoÂrts code needs to fall in line with best practices of International Olympic CouÂncil (IOC), the national Olympic commÂittees and international sports fedÂÂÂeÂÂÂrations. Fifty per cent of the 2017 draft code needs to be restructured,바카라 the former champion sprinter tells Outlook.
But sports lawyer Vidushpat Singhania feels the 2017 draft is good enough. 바카라I don바카라t know if age and tenure caps need to be diluted when these have been uphÂeld by the Delhi HC. And there has been no objection from the IOC on that; they have not debarred India. I don바카라t think there바카라s any reason to dilute these, and all of them [IOA and NSFs] have implemented these as well,바카라 says the man who was a member of the Mukul Mudgal-headed panel that drafted the 2013 Bill.
Former badminton champion U. Vimal Kumar concurs with Singhania. 바카라So far tenure is concerned, it is 12 years, and in this period anybody could do a good job. That aspect many are not willing to accÂept,바카라 he says. Former India football captain Bhaichung Bhutia, part of the present 13-member panel, says the code should be 바카라athlete-centric바카라, as 바카라priority should be sports, and it needs a lot of inpÂuts from athletes바카라.
Sports lawyer Nandan Kamath, part of the panel that wrote the 2017 draft, feels government control in sports should go. 바카라Indian sport has evolved in a very government-centric manner with expectations of funding바카라Šand a general cynicism about the state of federations. A government that facilitates rather than controls and well-governed, transparent federations leads to corporate and public participation in sport,바카라 he says.
As the country awaits an ideal sports code, it is worth recalling what Justices Bhat and Waziri wrote in their judgment in 2014: 바카라Sports administration바카라ŠappÂears to have reached depths from where neither sporting bodies nor the state seem to care any longer for successive generations바카라 sporting future. RefÂorm is to be introduced urgently. Sports administration appears to be mired in power play, where money, influence and chicanery play a dominant part and those who had participated in competitive sports at some stage are given token repreÂsentation or mostly marginalised. As the clichĂ© goes, the state of sports is in a lockjaw where roughly 1.2 billion people have to rest content with a harvest of medals so meagre as to be surpassed by one individual like Michael Phelps바카라.
The American swimmer won 28 Olympic medals, including 23 gold. India has a grand total of nine gold, in a total of 28, in 119 years of Olympic participation. All arguments end there.