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Regular-article-logo Friday, 26 April 2024

Have conducted myself with integrity: Sanath

The ICC on Monday charged Jayasuriya for violating the anti-corruption code which deals with non-cooperation in investigations

Our Bureau & Agencies Colombo Published 16.10.18, 08:06 PM
Sanath Jayasuriya

Sanath Jayasuriya Agencies

Sri Lankan legend Sanath Jayasuriya refused to comment on the ICC’s charge of non-cooperation in an ongoing anti-corruption probe, but insisted that he has always conducted himself with “integrity and transparency.”

The ICC on Monday charged Jayasuriya for violating the anti-corruption code which deals with non-cooperation in investigations. However, he was not accused of indulging in any corrupt activity.

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“... I am initially required to submit my response within 14 days. I am under strict legal advice that no comment is to be made in respect of the above charges as such a course would offend the ICC Rules,” Jayasuriya said in a statement on Tuesday.

The 49-year-old, who served as Sri Lanka’s chairman of selectors besides being a former Parliamentarian, said he would comment further only after his response to the ICC is submitted. “However, I am under advice to state that the above charges do not contain any allegations pertaining to match fixing, pitch fixing or any other similar corrupt activity,” he said.

“I have always conducted myself with integrity and transparency with matters concerning the sport and I will continue to do so,” he added.

The ICC did not specify the events that prompted its action against the celebrated cricketer, who is a World Cup winner and played 110 Tests and 445 ODIs.

[On Tuesday, The Telegraph had reported that the ICC’s Anti-Corruption Unit (ACU) first got in touch with Jayasuriya around a year ago. To begin with, it was met with non-cooperation and, then, Jayasuriya declined to share details of calls made and received by him.]

The investigation led to Galle curator Jayananda Warnaweera being banned for three years in 2016 for failing to cooperate with the ACU.

According to a cricket-specific website, Sri Lanka’s 2017 ODI home series against Zimbabwe, which they lost, is under the ICC’s scanner. Jayasuriya was into his second term as chairman of selectors at that time.

“It is understood that there were specific concerns about the fourth ODI of the series, in Hambantota, which Zimbabwe eventually won on the basis of the Duckworth-Lewis-Stern method despite Sri Lanka setting a 301-run target initially,” the website said.

One of Sri Lanka’s greatest cricketers, Jayasuriya was the Player of the 1996 World Cup, which is the country’s first and only World Cup title till date. His Test career lasted over a decade.

He was the first player to score over 12,000 runs and capture more than 300 wickets in ODI cricket. After signing off from international cricket, Jayasuriya also tried his hands at politics and in 2010 became an elected member of the Sri Lankan parliament, a stint that ended in 2015. He also served as a minister during the time.

In 2013, he became the selection committee’s chairman for the first time. The tenure ended in 2015 after a string of failures by the Lankan team.

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