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The BCCI appointed former Supreme Court judge Markandey Katju on Tuesday as the head of a four-member legal panel to help the Board understand the implications of the Justice Lodha Committee reforms, which have been made mandatory by the apex court.
Interestingly, Katju had questioned Supreme Court’s decision to allow the Lodha panel to decide punishments for players and cricket bodies involved in the IPL match-fixing controversy last year.
In a meeting of its all-powerful working committee, the BCCI decided to make Katju the single point interface for the Board to interact with the Justice Lodha Committee as well advise and guide the world’s richest cricketing body.
Apart from Katju, another legal luminary in the panel will be Abhinav Mukherjee. Justice Katju has been a judge in the Supreme Court from 2006 to 2011 apart from being the chairman of Press Council of India.
He was also a former chief justice of Delhi High Court, Madras High Court and acting chief justice of Allahabad High Court.
Post the Supreme Court verdict, Lodha Committee reforms have been made binding and the committee is expected to help BCCI in implementing the reforms in the next six months.
Accordingly, elections in Cricket Association of Bengal (CAB) and Karnataka State Cricket Associations (KSCA) have been frozen and Jammu and Kashmir Cricket Association (JKCA) polls have been declared null and void.
Most of the state associations are confused and against the ‘Age Cap’ of 70 years, cooling off period of three years and total tenure of nine years proposed by the Lodha panel and passed in the SC verdict.
The legal committee is expected to meet for the first time on August 4 and apprise the senior BCCI officials on the issue after which the Special General Meeting will be held on 5 August in New Delhi.
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