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Thursday, July 1, 2010

The KILLER of Aboriginal Agrarian Rural India Takes Over ICC, IPL SAGA Achieves Eternity Amidst FIFA World cup Blitz!

The KILLER of Aboriginal Agrarian Rural India Takes Over ICC, IPL SAGA Achieves Eternity Amidst FIFA World cup Blitz!

India's food price index up 12.92 pct y/y - govt


Troubled Galaxy destroyed Dreams- chapter 510

Palash Biswas


http://indianholocaustmyfatherslifeandtime.blogspot.com/

Former BCCI chief Sharad Pawar has taken over as International Cricket Council President on Thursday, becoming the second Indian, after Jagmohan Dalmiya, to occupy the top post. Pawar became the seventh ICC President, succeeding Englishman David Morgan.On the other hand,after unsuccessfully giving Cricket Board (BCCI) secretary N Srinivasan 48 hours'' time to recuse from any disciplinary proceedings against him, suspended IPL commissioner Lalit Modi is deciding the future course of action, said his legal counsel Mehmood Abdi today. "We gave Mr Srinivsan 48 hours to recuse himself and to alter the agenda of the July 3 Special General Body meeting.


  1. India minister of agriculture — Sharad PAWAR

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  2. Government of India, Department of Agriculture & cooperation ...

    Responsible for national policies and programmes aimed at achieving agricultural growth. Part of the Ministry of Agriculture.
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  4. Ministry of Agriculture - Agriculture - Sectors: National Portal ...

    This section provides important links and information on topics related to the policies and important information on the Agriculture sector.
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Meanwhile,India's food price index rose 12.92 per cent in the year to June 19, while the fuel price index climbed 12.90 percent, government data released on Thursday showed.

The pace of increase in food prices slowed from the previous week's annual rise of 16.90 percent, while fuel price inflation eased from last week's annual rise of 13.18 per cent. The primary articles index was up at 14.75 per cent.

Wholesale price index, the most closely watched inflation gauge in India, rose 10.16 per cent in May from a year earlier.



Dalmiya was the first Indian to be elected for the post, in 1997. Th decision was taken in the annual conference week which began on June 27 with the Chief Executives' Committee (CEC) meeting.


The main agenda for the CEC meeting was the subject of the Future Tours Programme 2012-20, including possibility of having ICC Test and ODI leagues.


The Executive Board also received updates on the design of mandatory Safety and Security Regulations drawn up by Security Task Force, chaired by Paul Condon, following the Lahore attack last year.


Pawar becomes the president at a time when Indian subcontinent will organise the World Cup 2011.


We have not got a reply (from Srinivasan) in this regard. We are watching the developments and will take appropriate action at appropriate time," Abdi told PTI. Modi wrote to Srinivasan, stating that the latter''s decision to convene the SGM to ratify his action of referring the charges against the suspended IPL chief and his replies thereof to the BCCI''s disciplinary committee was illegal.


Modi, who has raised counter allegations against Srinivasan, gave the BCCI secretary time till June 23 to confirm that his replies would be circulated to the BCCI''s general body in order to "decide the way forward in the matter including the allegations against him." The suspended IPL chief also wanted his suspension to be placed before the general body.


http://sports.in.msn.com/ipl2010/blogs/article.aspx?cp-documentid=3822997&page=0

Monsoon 16 per cent in deficit in June: Met office

Monsoon rains were 16 per cent below normal in June, the second-lowest since 1995, delaying soybean planting in the world's top edible oils importer and ruling out early lifting of curbs on grain exports. The shaky start of the rainy season also heightens concerns of food inflation that soared to nearly 17 per cent last month, having risen steadily after last year's June-September monsoon delivered the weakest rains in nearly four decades.

June rainfall was disappointing but still 60 percent higher than the same month a year ago, data from the India Meteorological Department (IMD) showed.

IMD said adverse local weather conditions had weakened the monsoon winds that reached the country's southern coast on schedule but have not advanced beyond eastern and central India since June 18. Still, the weather office expects a quick revival of rains and total rainfall in the four-month season would still be normal as forecast earlier, Ajit Tyagi, director general of the IMD told media.

"I stand by the forecast of normal monsoon. We are hopeful of a revival by July 2 or July 3," he said. The poor start of monsoon rains, the main source of water for 60 percent of Indian farms, has slowed down planting of soybeans in central India, while farmers in the grainbowl states of Punjab and Haryana may delay rice planting if rains do not revive quickly, traders and officials said.

Sluggish monsoon would also discourage the government from lifting export curbs on wheat and rice although the country has massive stockpiles, analysts say.

"Curbs on grain exports would continue until the monsoon ends," said S. Raghuraman, an analyst with the Delhi-based consulting firm Agriwatch. India's food prices were up an annual 16.90 percent in mid-June, while the overall inflation rate has risen above 10 per cent, maintaining pressure on the central bank to tighten monetary policy.

Inflation, which has already triggered several protests in the country, may rise further as the government last week lifted controls on petrol prices and raised the state-set rates of diesel, cooking gas and kerosene.


IPL franchises under the lens for service tax evasion


NEW DELHI: After the Income Tax department raising a demand of over Rs 600 crore from the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI), the service tax department, another arm of the finance ministry, has slapped as many as 32 showcause notices on Indian Premier League (IPL) franchises for alleged duty evasion to the tune of nearly Rs 64 crore.

The total collection of service tax by the department during the third season of IPL was Rs 29 crore. This was almost half of what it had made during IPL-2 which was held in South Africa. In the second season of IPL, the service tax collection was Rs 64 crore. The total collection made by service tax authorities in the first season was Rs 81 lakh.

While investigative agencies are yet to conclude probe on the remittances and shareholding pattern of these franchises, the Central Board of Excise and Customs (CBEC) constituted a team to review payments received from IPL on suspicion of evasion.

Commissioners in different zones were asked to look into the accounts of these franchises and seek details of their earnings and expenditure.

Sources said service tax authorities in Bangalore had issued a maximum of 14 showcause notices for estimated evasion to the tune of Rs 8.85 crore. The highest evasion of Rs 37 crore, however, has been detected in the Mumbai region where three franchises are assessed.

The notices were issued to franchises after tax officials accounted for all services provided by various stakeholders relating to the IPL matches.

Service tax is levied on franchise fees paid by eight franchises to the BCCI, remittances made to UK-based IMG for management and business consultancy services, on payments received by franchises on sale of advertisement space and on income from the sale of game rights, such as any toy or game of any kind which is based on the IPL or team competing in the league.

The lowest showcause was of Rs 9 lakh issued by the Kolkata commissionerate. In case of Chandigarh, it was Rs 6.24 crore; for Delhi it was Rs 11.31 crore and Chennai Rs 29 lakh.

I-T authorities have raised a tax demand of Rs 684 crore from the BCCI rejecting the cricket body's claim to exempt its income starting assessment year 2007-08.

Sources said the I-T department has asked BCCI to pay Rs 118 crore for 2007-08, Rs 421 crore for 2008-09 and Rs 145 crore for 2009-10. The department had earlier withdrawn tax exemption to the cricket body stating that it no longer promoted cricket as a charitable activity.

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28/04/2010

IPL will get bigger without Modi: Shetty

New Delhi: The success of the IPL was not because of Lalit Modi alone, according to a top BCCI official, who reckons the Twenty20 league will continue to flourish without the suspended Commissioner as cricket sells itself in India.

IPL will get bigger without Modi: Shetty

The BCCI's Chief Administrative Officer Ratnakar Shetty said that the Board has enough competent people to take the event forward.

"The IPL will continue to flourish. The success is not only because of Modi. BCCI will put up a good team to make IPL even more successful," Shetty told PTI in an e-mail interview today.

The high-flying Modi was suspended as the chairman and commissioner of the league after the final on Sunday because of alleged financial irregularities and rigging of bids.

Modi was charged on five counts, including irregularities in the bids of Rajasthan Royals and Kings XI Punjab and in the broadcast and internet deals.

Modi's removal has raised apprehensions among the franchises many of whom openly backed the embattled former commissioner during the raging controversy.

"There is no need for the franchisees to be apprehensive.

BCCI will ensure that IPL will be managed professionally. The BCCI president Shashank Manohar and interim chairman Chirayu Amin have already made it clear in this regard," Shetty said.

The scandal has tarnished the image of the BCCI to a great extent but Shetty said steps would be taken to protect the game and the Board's reputation.

"BCCI will take all steps required to protect the game and its own reputation. All these developments gave a bad name to the organisation but we will take all corrective steps," the chief administrative officer said.

Shetty, who has been given the responsibility of investigating all the missing documents related to bids and other IPL deals, said he would write to Modi to hand over all the original documents which are with him.

"We will officially write to Modi to hand over all the original documents held by him as they are the property of BCCI," he said.

Source: PTI



29/04/2010

Kings XI Punjab under I.T. scanner

Mumbai: The Indian Premier League (IPL) team, Kings XI Punjab, has come under the scanner of the Income Tax (IT) Department with respect to Mohit Burman''s share in the team.

Kings XI Punjab under I.T. scanner

"Mohit Burman''s funds came from London via Mauritius," said IT sources.

"Kings XI Punjab incurred unexpected losses of Rs 70 crore," sources added.

Kings XI co-owner Ness Wadia has rubbished all the charges against the team.

"Do not wish to get sucked into speculations in the media," said Ness Wadia.

"All funds are above the Board and we are co-operating with the investigating agencies," he added.

Preity Zinta, actor and part-owner of the Punjab team has said that there are no proxy holdings in Punjab Kings XI.

Zinta said that she is confident that suspended IPL Commsioner Lalit Modi is not a secret owner in the Punjab franchise.

Modi''s relative Mohit Burman, bought into the team at the same time as Zinta and other partners like Karan Paul. Mohit''s brother, Gaurav, invested in the team later, said Zinta, and he is not a front for Modi.

Source: ANI



01/07/2010

ICC to encourage resumption of Indo-Pak series: Pawar

Singapore: Barely hours after taking over as the ICC president, Sharad Pawar said the game's apex body would try to encourage the resumption of Indo-Pak bilateral series if there is government clearance from both sides.

ICC to encourage resumption of Indo-Pak series: Pawar

"Recent Foreign and Home Minister's visit to Pakistan is a welcome sign. If India and Pakistan start playing and it influences the bilateral relations of the two countries and also if both the governments permit, we will be happy to encourage," Pawar said.

Former BCCI President Pawar, who is also a serving union minister in the Indian government, begins a two-year term as ICC President after taking over from David Morgan today.

ICC to encourage resumption of Indo-Pak series: Pawar

The 69-year-old Pawar hoped the process to improve the relations between the two neighbouring countries will help to foster cricketing ties too.

"ICC wants India and Pakistan to continue their bilateral series. But ICC had not taken the initiative to stop that. It was because of some unforseen circumstances that both the countries had decided to stop it. But now that the process to improve relations between the countries is on, it will give some dividends to cricket too," Pawar told CNN-IBN.

ICC to encourage resumption of Indo-Pak series: Pawar

The cricketing ties between India and Pakistan were stalled after the 26/11 Mumbai terror attack in 2008.

Source: PTI


China PMI weighs globally, Nifty ends at 5250

1 Jul 2010, 1659 hrs IST,ET Bureau
MUMBAI: Indian equity benchmarks ended with heavy losses Thursday, mirroring other global peers on concerns of economic recovery. The mid and small cap stocks closed flat.

Indices opened lower after weak economic data from China spooked sentiments across Asia. China's Purchasing Manager's index fell to 52.1 in June from 53.9 in May. Negative opening of European indices also kept buyers under check.

Meanwhile, Indian manufacturing growth cooled in June after a surge in activity the prior month, mainly due to slowing production and rapidly easing input price pressures, a survey showed. The HSBC Markit Purchasing Manager's Index, based on a survey of 500 companies, slipped to 57.3 in June from 59.0 in May, which was the highest in more than two years.

National Stock Exchange's Nifty ended at 5251.40, down 61.10 points or 1.15 per cent. The broader index hit a low of 5232.10 and high of 5312.55.

Bombay Stock Exchange's Sensex closed at 17509.33, down 191.57 points or 1.08 per cent. The 30-share index hit a high of 17679.34 and low of 17455.41.

"We see the market remaining rangebound between 5050-5450. This month's expiry is likely at 5100 levels. Traders should adopt stock specific approach and go long.

IFCI, Reliance Infrastructure, IDBI, IDFC, Chambal Fertilisers and Divi's Labs can be bought of declines as 8-10% upside is expected in them," said Ashish Chaturmohta, vice president, senior derivatives & technical analyst, Anand Rathi Securities.

BSE Midcap Index was down 0.39 per cent and BSE Smallcap Index was up 0.11 per cent.

Amongst the sectoral indices, BSE Metal Index was down 1.70 per cent, BSE Realty Index fell 1.45 per cent and BSE Auto Index slipped 1.23 per cent.

Sterlite Industries (-3.33%), TCS (-3.10%), PNB (-3.08%), Reliance Communications (-3%) and Wipro (-2.85%) were amongst the major Sensex losers.

IDFC (1.51%), Hindustan Unilever (1.33%), Reliance Infrastructure (1.08%), Idea (0.84%), and Bharti Airtel (0.68%) were the only gainers.

Market breadth was flat on the NSE with 1,588 declines against 1,543 advances.

US stock futures indicate flat-to-positive start. At 4:45 pm IST, Dow Jones futures was up 0.07 per cent, S&P 500 moved 0.06 per cent higher and Nasdaq declined 0.10 per cent.


Mayawati adds Amethi to new district

Sify - ‎1 hour ago‎
Lucknow: Opening a new front against the Congress, the Mayawati government on Thursday created a new district named after Dalit icon Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj which would include Amethi, Rahul Gandhi's Lok Sabha constituency. ...

Rahul's Amethi becomes Sahuji Maharaj Nagar district

Hindustan Times - ‎4 hours ago‎
AICC general secretary Rahul Gandhi's parliamentary constituency Amethi on Thursday became 72nd district of the state. It will be known as Chatrapati Sahuji Maharaj Nagar. Gauriganj will be the district headquarters. Similarly, nearly three-decade-old ...

Mayawati carves out new UP district from Amethi

Press Trust of India - ‎6 minutes ago‎
Lucknow, July 1 (PTI) Opening a new front against the Congress, UP Chief Minister Mayawati today created a new district carved out of Amethi-- Rahul Gandhi's Lok Sabha constituency-- and named it after dalit icon Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj. ...

SP hints of restoring original names of districts

Hindustan Times - ‎4 hours ago‎
Samajwadi Party national general secretary Ramgopal Yadav on Thursday hinted that the party would restore districts their original name once it returned to power. This was in context to new names that the Mayawati government gave to Amethi and Kanpur ...

Mayawati renames new district in Gandhi stronghold

NDTV.com - ‎4 hours ago‎
New Delhi: With the Rahul Gandhi threat to her turf growing by the day in Uttar Pradesh, Chief Minister Mayawati has fired the next salvo in the fierce battle for Dalit votes. She has resurrected a move to carve out a new district that includes the ...

Maya gets Dalit name for Amethi

indiablooms - ‎2 hours ago‎
Lucknow, July 1 (IBNS) A name-game started between Congress leader Rahul Gandhi and Uttar Pradesh chief minister Mayawati on Thursday as her government brought his Lok Sabha constituency Amethi under a new district named after Dalit icon Chattrapati ...

Rahul's constituency Amethi gets district status; Cong mum

MyNews.in - ‎1 hour ago‎
Amethi/Lucknow: Congress was taken aback on the decision of the Mayawati government in Uttar Pradesh to recognise Amethi, the Parliamentary constituency of party general secretary Rahul Gandhi, as Chhatrapati Sahuji Maharaj Nagar district. ...

Rahul Gandhi's Amethi constituency made district

SINDH TODAY - ‎2 hours ago‎
Lucknow, July 1 (IANS) Uttar Pradesh Chief Minister Mayawati Thursday declared Amethi – the parliamentary constituency of Congress general secretary Rahul Gandhi – the state's 72nd district and renamed it after her Bahujan Samaj Party's Dalit icon, ...

Amethi to be part of Chattrapati Shahuji Maharaj Nagar District

BreakingNewsOnline. - ‎3 hours ago‎
Lucknow: Breaking News! In a significant development, which may create further divide between the Congress and ruling BSP in Uttar Pradesh, the Mayawati government has included Amethi in a newly carved district. The new district will be known as ...

कॉरपोरेट जगत के हित में देश की आम जनता के संहार की योजना रोकें

हम महसूस करते हैं कि यह भारतीय लोकतंत्र के लिए एक विध्वंसक कदम होगा, यदि सरकार ने अपने लोगों को, बजाय उनके शिकायतों को निबटाने के उनका सैन्य रूप से दमन करने की कोशिश की. ऐसे किसी अभियान की अल्पकालिक सफलता तक पर संदेह है, लेकिन आम जनता की भयानक दुर्गति में कोई संदेह नहीं है, जैसा कि दुनिया में अनगिनत विद्रोह आंदोलनों के मामलों में देखा गया है. हमारा भारत सरकार से कहना है कि वह तत्काल सशस्त्र बलों को वापस बुलाये और ऐसे किसी भी सैन्य हमले की योजनाओं को रोके, जो गृहयुद्ध में बदल जा सकते हैं और जो भारतीय आबादी के निर्धनतम और सर्वाधिक कमजोर हिस्से को व्यापक तौर पर क्रूर विपदा में धकेल देगा तथा उनके संसाधनों की कॉरपोरेशनों द्वारा लूट का रास्ता साफ कर देगा. इसलिए सभी जनवादी लोगों से हम आह्वान करते हैं कि वे हमारे साथ जुड़ें और इस अपील में शामिल हों.
-अरुंधति रॉय, नोम चोम्स्की, आनंद पटवर्धन, मीरा नायर, सुमित सरकार, डीएन झा, सुभाष गाताडे, प्रशांत भूषण, गौतम नवलखा, हावर्ड जिन व अन्य
http://hashiya.blogspot.com/2010/06/blog-post_25.html
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FACTBOX - Six major corruption scandals in India

Wed Jun 30, 2010 5:52pm IST
Police stand guard at the headquarters of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) during a governing council meeting of Indian Premier League (IPL) in Mumbai April 26, 2010. REUTERS/Arko Datta/Files

Police stand guard at the headquarters of the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) during a governing council meeting of Indian Premier League (IPL) in Mumbai April 26, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Arko Datta/Files

NEW DELHI (TrustLaw) – According to global corruption watchdog, Transparency International, corruption in India is endemic and present in most sectors of society.

Top News

Here are six major corruption scandals involving different sectors of society which have hit the headlines:

SPORTS: The head of India's $4 billion cricket league, Lalit Modi, was suspended from his post in April following graft allegations in a scandal that has also ensnared politicians. Tax authorities are currently probing the three-year-old Indian Premier League, the game's most lucrative tournament, after a junior government minister resigned following allegations of improper influence. While Modi has not been formally charged and denies any wrongdoing, newspapers have said authorities are investigating reports of improprieties in bidding for teams and in negotiating television broadcast rights for the matches.

HEALTH: In January 2008, the World Bank said it had uncovered "serious incidents" of corruption in a review of five health projects in India. A probe by the Bretton Woods institution found there were "unacceptable indicators of fraud and corruption" in bank-funded projects for HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis. Funding for the projects, which were launched between 1997 and 2003, totalled over $500 million. The bank review found evidence of bid rigging and other forms of procurement fraud as well as corruption and shoddy auditing.

DEFENCE: The Bofors case has been one of the highest-profile and longest-running criminal investigations in India. In the 1980's, the then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and several other officials were accused of receiving kickbacks from Swedish arms manufacturer AB Bofors for winning a bid to supply India with 400 howitzers. The scale of the corruption was far worse than any that India had seen before, and directly led to the defeat of Gandhi's ruling Indian National Congress party in the November 1989 general elections.

JUDICIARY: In July 2008, an investigation found 36 judges were guilty of receiving gifts bought with money embezzled from the court treasury in Ghaziabad, a satellite town on the outskirts of the capital. Tens of millions of rupees were siphoned off from the provident funds of employees by the treasury officer who illegally spent the money on furniture, crockery, mobiles, laptops, rail tickets, taxi fares and other items for the judges.

POLITICS: In November 2009, Madhu Koda, the former chief minister of the eastern state of Jharkhand, was arrested in connection with a corruption investigation. Koda is accused of possessing assets disproportionate with his income and for alleged money laundering. He is alleged to have laundered millions of rupees from public coffers during his stint as chief minister of Jharkhand between 2006 and 2008.

CORPORATE: In January 2009, Ramalinga Raju, chairman and founder of India's fourth-largest software company Satyam Computer Services, resigned after revealing years of accounting fraud in the country's biggest corporate fraud. Raju admitted about $1 billion, or 94 percent of the cash on the company's books was fictitious. "What started as a marginal gap between actual operating profits and the one reflected in the books of accounts continued to grow over the years," said Raju. "It was like riding a tiger, not knowing how to get off without being eaten."

(TrustLaw is a global centre for free legal assistance and anti-corruption news run by Thomson Reuters Foundation. For more TrustLaw stories, visit www.trust.org/trustlaw/)

Friends turn foes for Modi

Cricketnext.com - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
New Delhi: The suspended commissioner of the IPL Lalit Modi seems to be running out of friends as people who once hailed him as 'supreme figure' have all ...

MSM to pay Rs 425 crore to BCCI as amended rights fee

Economic Times - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
MUMBAI: The days of suspended Indian Premier League (IPL) commissioner Lalit Modi are all but over. The IPL Governing Council (GC) which met on Friday at ...

Rs 40 lakh to drive Mr Lalit Modi

Hindustan Times - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
The Board of Control for Cricket in India has taken steps to recover the Rs 425 crore Lalit Modi cost it when selling the television rights for the IPL. ...

MSM sues WSG to recover IPL payment

Rediff - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
The Indian Premier League's [ Images ] broadcast rights holders MSM Satellite (Singapore), which has entered into an amended agreement with the Board of ...

MSMS cancels all future payments to WSG Asia

Moneycontrol.com - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
MSM Satellite (Singapore) (MSMS), the broadcasters of the Indian Premier League (IPL) has cancelled all future payments to World Sports Group (WSG) Asia. ...

IPL governing council says suspended chief Modi committed 'major irregularities'

The Canadian Press - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
MUMBAI, India — The Indian Premier League governing council says the league's suspended commissioner Lalit Modi had committed "major irregularities" during ...

India ponders IPL format in post-Modi era

AFP - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
NEW DELHI — India's cricket chiefs on Friday moved to make a new start for the scandal-hit Indian Premier League, hoping to dispel doubts over the event's ...

Modi committed 'irregularities': IPL

Cricketnext.com - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
Mumbai: The walls seem to be closing in alarmingly around suspended IPL boss Lalit Modi as the Governing Council in its meeting on Friday found the ...

Ness Wadia: We miss Lalit Modi

NDTV.com - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
Ness Wadia, who is a co-owner of the Kings XI Punjab IPL team, said he hoped Lalit Modi would get a fair trial.

Modi dares BCCI as IPL meets to seal his fate

IBNLive.com - ‎Jun 25, 2010‎
New Delhi/Mumbai: Lalit Modi continues to raise the stakes and this time his target is the BCCI Secretary N Srinivasan who also owns the IPL team Chennai ...

Timeline of articles

Timeline of articles
Number of sources covering this story

MSM to pay Rs 425 crore to BCCI as amended rights fee
‎Jun 25, 2010‎ - Economic Times

BCCI meet: Auction, Modi to be discussed
‎Jun 24, 2010‎ - Cricketnext.com

IPL franchises share views with BCCI
‎Jun 24, 2010‎ - The Hindu

Modi cornered as Board turns on the heat
‎Jun 23, 2010‎ - Hindustan Times

Exclusive: BCCI rejects Lalit Modi's replies, will take further action
‎Jun 22, 2010‎ - NDTV.com

Images

AFP
Daily News & An...
Times LIVE
The Hindu
Indian Express
NDTV.com
Findtut
Calcutta Telegr...
Samachar Today ...

Videos

Ness Wadia: We miss Lalit Modi
NDTV.com  -  Jun 25, 2010 Watch video




FIFA World Cup 2010-The End of Cristiano Ronaldo

bettor.com (blog) - Michael Anderson - ‎3 hours ago‎
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Skubble (blog) - Jack Staffard - ‎11 hours ago‎
Spain will now advance to the Quarter Finals Round while Portugal will now go home as they were already eliminated out of the FIFA World Cup 2010.

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bettor.com (blog) - Michael Anderson - ‎3 hours ago‎
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Entertainment and Showbiz! (blog) - ‎16 hours ago‎
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Entertainment and Showbiz! (blog) - ‎17 hours ago‎
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Spain vs. Portugal World Cup 2010 Scores and Match Highlights

WWNN.co.uk - Robin John McWell - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
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The Global Herald - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
European champions Spain have made it through to the quarter finals of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, beating their Iberian cousins Portugal 1 – 0 in a fairly low ...

FIFA World Cup 2010: Spain Vs Portugal - Match Analysis

bettor.com (blog) - Michael Anderson - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
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Bleacher Report - Zaakir Hoosen - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
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Sports Betting Live (blog) - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
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FIFA World Cup 2010 Quarter Finals: Paraguay v Spain Preview

Suite101.com - Steve Rogerson - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Report includes football betting tips The last quarter final match in the 2010 FIFA World Cup on Saturday 3 July 2010 sees South America versus Europe as ...

Spain vs Portugal: Spain vs Portugal World Cup 2010 Review

Live Football (blog) - Alex Callos - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
Spain players and their coach are happy with the team's performance. Spain lost against Switzerland in the opening match of the 2010 FIFA World Cup.

Spain vs Portugal Score & results: FIFA World Cup 2010 results

New Delhi Chronicle.com (blog) - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
Spain vs Portugal Score & results: FIFA World Cup 2010 results CAPE TOWN: David Villa guided Spain through to the World Cup quarter finals after scoring his ...

FIFA World Cup 2010 Results: Paraguay, Spain in Quarterfinals

Buzzle - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Paraguay and Spain won their round of 16 matches respectively in the ongoing FIFA World Cup 2010, thus booking the last 2 places in the quarterfinals. ...

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Haryana News (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
This match was the 56th match of th fifa world cup-2010 of round 16. The match referee was Hector Baldassi from Argentina. The match was played at Green ...

FIFA World Cup, 2010: Villa's goal sends Spain in Quarters

Entertainment and Showbiz! (blog) - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
... Torres failed to convert those chances. Spain will now take on Paraguay in the quarter finals on 3rd July. Stay tuned for more updates from the World Cup.

Spain Portugal World Cup: FIFA World Cup 2010 Results and Game Scores

Toshbee (blog) - Brandon Filler - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Watch Spain vs Portugal World Cup 2010 Live Streaming Online – This will be considered as the last match for the Round 16 stage of the recently running ...

Watch 2010 FIFA World Cup Live Streaming Online Free, Live Stream Online ...

Hovied News - John Samson - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
SPAIN vs PORTUGAL: One of the most anticipated matches for the 2010 FIFA World Cup is between the two remaining European powerhouses Spain and Portugal who ...

Football World Cup 2010-Portugal VS Spain: Live TV Coverage On ESPN

Newsmag.net (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Today 29 June 2010, there is a match of FIFA World cup 2010, Portugal VS Spain. It will be an important match of the FIFA World Cup 2010. ...

Spain vs Portugal : FIFA World Cup 2010

Tekken Philippines - Julia Mo - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
As for the last game in the FIFA World Cup Round of Sixteen, only one great team will complete the list of top 8 teams in ...

World Cup 2010: Spain vs Portugal Match Recap

World Correspondents (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Portugal and Spain is the last football to end the last day of the Round of 16 elimination round at the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa which will be ...

David Villa strike knocks Portugal out of the FIFA World Cup 2010

Jacktimes.com - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Portugal have been knocked out of the the 2010 FIFA World Cup after a kick from David Villa hit the back of the net. With both teams locked in at 0-0 at ...

Spain VS Portugal Live Stream Scores and Updates: FIFA World Cup 2010

The Online Heralds (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Spain VS Portugal Live Stream Scores and Updates: FIFA World Cup 2010 – The final sixteen bracket of the World Cup 2010 had reach its final day and the ...

Spain vs Portugal Highlights - World Cup 2010

Techie Buzz - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
by Watch Stuff Online | Translate | Print Watch Spain vs Portugal FIFA World Cup 2010 match highlights and videos online. Watch Spain vs Portugal FIFA 2010 ...

Watch Spain vs Portugal Live Stream – FIFA World Cup 2010

Busy Buzz Blogging (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
I believe this will be one of the toughest matches in the FIFA World Cup 2010 tournament and this match starts at 2:30pm EST. I definitely can't wait! ...

Spain vs Portugal live streaming FIFA World Cup 2010 June 29th

24x7 Websitekraft News (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Enjoy everybody here to see an exclusive World Cup match Spain vs Portugal live. The FIFA World Cup 2010 Soccer live game able able on your PC. ...

Watch FIFA World Cup 2010 : Portugal Vs Spain Live Streaming Online

Hot National News (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
One of the most exciting matches of this year World Cup 2010 is scheduled to take in couple of minutes from now. Two strong teams, out of which Spain was ...

Spain vs Portugal Live FIFA world cup 2010 Soccer City

NewsFuze.Info (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
STORY World Cup 2010 South Africa Match – Group A (Group Stage) – Fifa World Cup South Africa 2010 :: Johannesburg, South Africa live online stream game ...

2010 FIFA World Cup: Villa Goal Ends Portuguese Dreams

Tripoli Post - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
... the first between the two in the competition and also the first in six years, and reach the quarter-finals of the 2010 FIFA World Cup South Africa. ...

Spain vs. Portugal World Cup 2010 Soccer Scores and Results

World Contributor (blog) - Maya Duncan - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Portugal and their talisman Ronaldo Cristiano will now need to go home after being eliminated in the FIFA World Cup 2010 finals. ...

FIFA World Cup 2010: Spain's Five Keys To Take the World Cup Home

Bleacher Report - Cristian Sirera - ‎42 minutes ago‎
As Spain prepares for a seemingly easy game against Paraguay in the World Cup Quarterfinals, an entire country prays for La Roja not to fall one step short ...

2010 FIFA World Cup: 10 Things To Know About Spain

Bleacher Report - Todd Lamansky - ‎14 hours ago‎
Spain has never won a penalty shootout in the World Cup. The 1950 tournament, in which they finished fourth, didn't even have a quarterfinal. FIFA split the ...

Paraguay Vs Japan Live Streaming Watch Online FIFA 2010 Football Worldcup ...

Globe and Mail - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Paraguay Vs Japan Live Streaming Watch Online FIFA 2010 Football Worldcup Japan Vs Paraguay Watch Live Online Stream World Cup Live Stream: Japan and ...

2010 FIFA World Cup: 10 Things To Know About Paraguay

Bleacher Report - Colm Larkin - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
A brilliant South American qualifying campaign saw Paraguay qualify for the 2010 FIFA World Cup with two games to spare. The team's top scorer with six ...

Spain vs. Paraguay 2010 FIFA World Cup: Quarterfinals Predictions

Bleacher Report - Ron Furlong - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
The South American country, one of four in the quarterfinals, has not exactly been putting on an offensive show in the World Cup, with a 1-1 draw with Italy ...

FIFA World Cup 2010 Super Soccer Tuesday Parguay and Spain Move On To Quarters

Click News (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
With both teams fighting for a first time place in a FIFA World Cup quarter finals which is perhaps why much of the first 90 minutes lacked the passion and ...

FIFA World Cup 2010: Watch Paraguay vs. Japan Live Streaming Online

Showbiz Gossips (press release) (blog) - John Earl Merka - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Japan World Cup 2010 Live Streaming Online Free – The FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa is getting nearer and nearer to its finals! ...

FIFA world cup 2010 schedule, game, results & review: Paraguay into WC quarter ...

New Delhi Chronicle.com (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
FIFA world cup 2010 schedule, game, results & review PRETORIA: Paraguay made history when they progressed to the quarter final of the World Cup for the ...

FIFA World cup: Some statistics

Economic Times - ‎14 hours ago‎
100: Per cent of the last six penalty shootouts at the FIFA World Cup have been won by the team taking the first kick. 51: Appearances as Spain captain was ...

World Cup Soccer 2010: Paraguay advances as Asian hopes die with Japan eliminated

bettor.com (blog) - Michael Anderson - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
The South Americans are having a blast at the FIFA World Cup in South Africa, as their teams have done extremely well in the tournament so far. ...

Watch FIFA Soccer World Cup 2010 Online Live Stream

The Media Kings (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
After the group stage matches fans are now searching for the 2010 FIFA World Cup Round of 16 Schedule. Many Soccer freaks are browsing ESPN website for 2010 ...

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InfoCuts (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
It is the quarter final and Japan and Paraguay are tied in battle for the win that could decide the potential winner of the FIFA world cup 2010. ...

Soccer Coverage: Latest Official Results Japan vs Paraguay 2010 World Cup

Vigilant Press - Yunus Osman - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Japan vs Paraguay is the most awaited game for the FIFA World Cup 2010. Don't miss the games. Tons of websites online offer these live streaming for the ...

Paraguay Reaches Quarter Finals in the 2010 World Cup

SportsUntapped.com (blog) - Kyle Wanchalk - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
South America is a big party right about now as almost their entire east coast has advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2010 FIFA World Cup. ...

Watch Paraguay vs Japan Live Streaming Online - FIFA World Cup 2010

Breaking Entertainment News - Dunley Fox - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
FIFA World Cup 2010 soccer has reached it's last day of the Round of 16. To see who will play the winner of the Spain/Portugal game, make sure you watch ...

Paraguay vs. Japan FIFA World Cup 2010 Live Stream TV And On-line Schedules

Hovied News - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Paraguay made it to Round 16 of FIFA World Cup 2010 after outshooting New Zealand with a scoreless draw last Thursday to secure first place for the first ...

Paraguay vs Japan World Cup 2010 Live Scores and Highlights

Sports Newscaster (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
World Cup 2010: Japan vs Paraguay Live Stream Online and Live Scores – More people are there to witness another exciting match today at FIFA World Cup 2010. ...

World Cup 2010: Farewell Asia, Hello Penalties

Wall Street Journal (blog) - Paul Beckett - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
So the exit of the last Asian team from the FIFA World Cup 2010 in South Africa this evening will barely be noticed here even though Japan carried the ...

FIFA WORLD CUP 2010 : Paraguay vs Japan Live Results and Score Updates!

FSN Connect - Serge Jones - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
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FIFA World Cup, 2010: Paraguay edges out Japan to reach last 8

Entertainment and Showbiz! (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
... Paraguay the chance to advance to the Quarter Finals. Paraguay will play the winner from Portugal and Spain's match. Stay tuned for more World Cup updates.

Paraguay vs Japan Time and Live Score: FIFA World Cup 2010

South Asia Blog (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Paraguay and Japan are taking on each other in a round of 16 match of World Cup 2010 on 29 June at the Loftus Versfeld Stadium in Pretoria . ...

Watch Paraguay VS Japan Live Stream Online | World Cup 2010

The Daily Inquirer (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Posted by Ron Del Rosario on Jun 29th, 2010 and filed under World Cup 2010. Watch Paraguay VS Japan Live Stream Online | FIFA World Cup 2010 – Japan's entry ...

FIFA World Cup 2010: Watch Paraguay vs Japan Live Streaming Online

Skubble (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
He said that they will not allow another Asian to lose early in this stage and at least have a slot at the quarterfinals of World Cup 2010. ...

Round Of 16 FIFA World Cup 2010: Paraguay Vs Japan Live Updates

dailynews365 - Sunil Sonkar - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Today one of these teams will make its first foray into the quarterfinals of FIFA World Cup 2010. In the opening match of this World Cup Justo Villar, ...

Paraguay vs Japan Live: World Cup 2010 Live Stream Online Second Round

TSL Buzz - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Watch FIFA World Cup 2010 Second Round Live Stream Online Paraguay vs Japan Football match at Loftus Versfeld Stadium, Tshwane/Pretoria, South Africa on ...

Round of 16 FIFA World Cup 2010: Paraguay Vs Japan Match Preview

dailynews365 - Sunil Sonkar - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
June 29 — Paraguay vs Japan is probably the closest game in the FIFA World Cup 2010 first round of knockout stages. ...

FIFA World Cup 2010 Paraguay Vs Japan Live Blog: Results, Scores, and Analysis

Bleacher Report - Craig Farrell - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
Come one, come all, and enjoy the World Cup with great insight, analysis, and banter. Asian hopes rest firmly on the shoulders of the Japan players after ...

FIFA World Cup 2010 – Paraguay vs. Japan – Blue samurais and the South ...

bettor.com (blog) - Michael Anderson - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
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Merinews - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
The fight for inclusion in the quarterfinals of the world cup between these two teams came as a surprise. AS THE FIFA 2010 World Cup fever has reached its ...

FIFA World Cup 2010 Super Soccer Tuesday Parguay v Japan:Spain v Portugal

Click News (blog) - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
We've already played in critical games during qualifying and now we have another all-or-nothing match at a World Cup. That's why we're ready to give ...

World Cup 2010: Nigeria facing explusion from Fifa

BBC Sport - ‎3 hours ago‎
Nigeria's president Goodluck Jonathan has suspended the national team for two years following a poor World Cup. "Fifa has a very clear position on political ...

World Cup 2010: Nigerian president bans football team from international ...

Telegraph.co.uk - ‎6 hours ago‎
Rotimi Amaechi, governor of a key oil-producing state, Rivers, who heads a special presidential task force on the World Cup campaign which includes football ...

World Cup 2010: Eagles Fly Coop, Nigeria Self-Imposes Ban from World Football

Bleacher Report - Nik Leighton - ‎22 hours ago‎
In the wake of a disappointing showing at the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan has imposed a two-year ban from international ...

2010 W/CUP FALLOUT: FG bans Eagles for 2 years •To audit NFF's accounts •We're ...

Nigerian Tribune - Leon Usigbe - ‎15 hours ago‎
FOLLOWING the uninspiring performance of the Super Eagles in the ongoing World Cup in South Africa, the Federal Government has ordered the immediate ...

World Cup 2010: Governments Meddling in Football

bettor.com (blog) - Michael Anderson - ‎7 hours ago‎
With the Nigerian president suspending the country's international team for a period of two years because of their dismal performance at the World Cup 2010, ...

Nigeria to stay off international soccer for two years

The Nation Newspaper - Vincent Ikuomola - ‎16 hours ago‎
The decisions followed the recommendations of the Presidential Task Force on the 2010 World Cup. The committee, headed by Rivers State Governor Rotimi ...

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The Nation Newspaper - Andrew Abah - ‎16 hours ago‎
"This directive became necessary following Nigeria's poor performance in the ongoing FIFA World Cup." said Spokes person to the President, Ima Niboro Under ...

World Cup 2010: FIFA Not Yet Ready To Act On Nigeria Interference

Peace FM Online - ‎11 minutes ago‎
Nigeria is scheduled to receive prize money of $8 million (?6.5 million) from FIFA for participating in the World Cup. Nigerian Football Federation ...

Nigerian president suspends national team from world football

Sify - ‎15 hours ago‎
Chairman of the Presidential Task Force (PTF) for the 2010 World Cup, Rotimi Amaechi, berated the administration of football in Nigeria, saying it was ...

World Cup 2010 - FIFA could expel France, Nigeria

Yahoo! Eurosport UK - ‎2 hours ago‎
The French government has also been warned over interfering in football affairs, with FIFA president Sepp Blatter complaining that the nation's World Cup ...

World Cup 2010: Fifa Re-Issues Political Warning

Peace FM Online - ‎2 hours ago‎
Fifa : Fifa has re-issued its warning over political interference in football after Nigeria and France's reactions to going out of the World Cup. ...

ANALYSIS: Nigeria face FIFA ban after government interference

Monsters and Critics.com - Samm Audu - ‎8 hours ago‎
The government said an auditing of all the expenditure at the 2010 World Cup and the reorganisation of football structure during this two-year hibernation ...

Nigeria president suspends soccer team for poor play

MiamiHerald.com - Michelle Kaufman - ‎10 hours ago‎
"This directive became necessary following Nigeria's poor performance in the FIFA World Cup,'' said Ima Niboro, the president's communications officer. ...

How will world football governing body react ?

NEXT - Cheta Nwanze - ‎6 hours ago‎
Brazil (or whoever wins the WC 2010) comes to play a friendly with Nigeria in Abuja. In six months time, Nigeria hosts WAFU Cup which we win with CAF ...

2010 FIFA World Cup team reviews: Nigeria

Helium - Darrell Victor - ‎Jun 28, 2010‎
The "Super Eagles" – as Nigeria are known – are one of the better African teams and were expected to perform well at the 2010 FIFA World ...

Nigerian president suspends national program for poor performance

AnnArbor.com - Pete Cunningham - ‎4 hours ago‎
After 19 straight days of soccer, the 2010 FIFA World Cup had its first official break in action on Wednesday, but that didn't keep teams from making ...

NFF In The Dark Over Suspension

P.M. News - ‎2 hours ago‎
President Jonathan, yesterday suspended the senior national football team for two years following their poor showing at the ongoing 2010 FIFA World Cup in ...

Players' union angered by Nigerian ban

Independent Online - ‎3 hours ago‎
The president said he was basing his decision on the recommendations of a Presidential Task Force for the 2010 World Cup, which reported "gross ...

Nigerian Team Suspended

New York Times - ‎12 hours ago‎
The Times's soccer blog has the 2010 World Cup covered from all angles, with news, features and live analysis of every match.

Nigeria denied window to the world

BBC Sport (blog) - ‎17 hours ago‎
Nigeria did reach the last 16 at France '98 - but the West Africans haven't won a World Cup game since and their 2002 and 2010 campaigns, either side of ...

Goodluck Jonathan Bans Nigeria from International Competition Until 2012

Bleacher Report - Andrew Jordan - ‎22 hours ago‎
Going into the 2010 FIFA World Cup, Nigeria had extremely high hopes as they found themselves in a group that they could have advanced from with Argentina, ...

Things fall apart in football house

BusinessDay - ‎4 hours ago‎
Since our World Cup debut in 1994, FIFA has come to associate Nigerian football with poise, robustness, fluidity of passes and audacious exhibition of skill ...

Nigeria's President Punishes Football Team for 2 Years

Novinite.com - ‎16 hours ago‎
Nigeria's national football team has been punished by the country's president for performing poorly in the 2010 World Cup. Photo by fifa.com/worldcup The ...

Goodluck Jonathan Suspends Nigeria's Football Team

Rudefox - ‎14 hours ago‎
... has suspended the country's football team from international competition for two years after a disappointing performance in the Fifa World Cup 2010. ...

Nigeria Withdraws From International Football

Nigeria Daily Independent - ‎16 hours ago‎
He also disclosed the decision to probe how the budget for the 2010 World Cup was spent by the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF). ...

World Cup 2010: Nigeria president suspends team

BBC News - ‎Jun 30, 2010‎
Rotimi Amaechi, head of a special presidential task force on the World Cup campaign, said Nigeria would write to football's world governing body Fifa to ...

We are sorry, says football federation

NEXT - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
I suggest Lager back should be fired and Siasia given the task to build a new super eagles that will deliver the world cup in 2010 to Nigeria. ...

Goodluck sacks football federation

NEXT - Elizabeth Archibong - ‎15 hours ago‎
The decision came against the backdrop of the Super Eagles' poor performance at the ongoing FIFA World Cup in South Africa. The Eagles finished at the ...

CAF Wades Into FIFA/Nigeria Row

P.M. News - ‎1 hour ago‎
Many Nigerians have been unhappy with the performance of the Super Eagles at the 2010 World Cup finals, as well as the Nigeria Football Federation (NFF) ...

Jonathan lambasts NSC leadership

Nigerian Tribune - Saliu Gbadamosi - ‎Jun 29, 2010‎
... of the Super Eagles from the South Africa 2010 World Cup and ordered that every report on the championship should be made available to him immediately. ...

15/04/2010

Owning responsibility- The IPL has a lot to learn

Sports leagues across the world have careful histories of due diligence over who owns and buys their teams -- something the IPL should learn that the NFL, arguably the most lucrative and successful professional sports league in the world, has a somewhat unique ownership structure, one which allows it to maintain strict control over management and ownership of teams.

Owning responsibility- The IPL has a lot to learn

There is absolutely no corporate ownership. The sale and purchase of Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal are frequently debated, and due diligence and background checks that have been conducted are sometimes questioned with respect to their thoroughness, as are the ownership guidelines.

The transparency of ownership in the Indian Premier League, or IPL, has garnered much attention of late, with much of the focus being on the equity ownership of the new Kochi franchise. While it would be premature to speculate on whether or not the ownership of the ten franchises is of questionable antecedents, what seems to have gone relatively unnoticed in all the fuss is that this is an extremely positive development, albeit if carried out under duress.

Owning responsibility- The IPL has a lot to learn


There shouldn't be an iron curtain when it comes to information on team and league ownership in professional sports leagues.

Indeed, the IPL is one of the only global sports leagues about which so little is known when it comes to the stakeholders. Until now this was not really an issue; but transparency in ownership is a must, as is accountability of the league and confidence in its conforming with legal and ethical considerations.

It is, after all, about to enter the next phase of its existence. Investments in the teams are imminent. So are, reportedly, changes of ownership and of control of the franchises. Prior to these contracts taking place, there should be a clear cut methodology in place that governs how the league does its due diligence when it is to induct new ownership.

Owning responsibility- The IPL has a lot to learn

Globally, there isn't a hard and fast rule that describes the structure of professional sports leagues; nor is there any such rule when it comes to the ownership pattern of the teams within them. Ye s, it is true that the fact remains that ownership in professional sports leagues -- especially where there are large consortiums owning a particular team -- are hard to regulate and verify.

However, the first step is transparency, and a clearcut guideline of ownership which would stipulate the ownership eligibility criterion. Once the eligibility criterion is met, then one can verify the funding and ownership.

The National Football League and the English Premier League are two of the most profitable and popular sports leagues in the world. Their respective league rules however mandate contrasting ownership structures.

The NFL, arguably the most lucrative and successful professional sports league in the world, has a somewhat unique ownership structure, one which allows it to maintain strict control over management and ownership of teams. Unlike other leagues, there is absolutely no corporate ownership allowed, and the ownership groups must contain twenty-four or fewer individuals.

The general partner and his/her family must together own thirty percent or more of the team, and any change in ownership is strictly regulated. The reasoning behind this is also linked to ensuring focused management with a singular vision as well as consistent and long term ownership. The ownership for the most part is transparent, and for all intents and purposes, above-board.

The EPL is the exact opposite, where size and influence have mattered. The sale or purchase of Manchester United, Chelsea, Liverpool and Arsenal are frequently debated, and due diligence and background checks that have been conducted are sometimes questioned with respect to their thoroughness. The ownership guidelines have been questioned, too, along with their implementation.

The EPL faces, as well, questions about the nature of foreign investment in its clubs. While foreign investment has propped up the league and made it a global powerhouse, many of the clubs are debt-ridden, and the cleanliness of the funds and ownership has been a subject of mass speculation.

Owning responsibility- The IPL has a lot to learn

Other professional sports leagues follow different patterns. Some leagues own their teams outright; investors then pay for the rights to manage and host a particular team's games. There is no clear-cut formula for how leagues are owned globally.

While foreign ownership in the US leagues hasn't been much of a factor, the EPL on the other hand has seen a mass influx of foreign investment, and there are concerns as to whether or not the ownership guidelines would need to be tweaked.

The Thaksin fiasco with Manchester City -in which the controversial former Prime Minister of Thailand briefly became the storied club's majority shareholder before selling out to an Abu-Dhabi based consortium -led to calls for curbing foreign investment But what the debt-ridden EPL clubs desperately need is equity financing.

What is more likely is a more rigorous `know your investor' credential and background check, so as to ensure the sanctity of management and ownership of these teams. This is also something the IPL can adopt so as to avoid future spats, and ensure there is a systematic procedure in place. If it learns from the EPL, then it has found a good model to emulate.

Source: The Indian Express


Howard veto may force ICC change

Sydney Morning Herald - Jesse Hogan, Ellie Harvey - ‎24 minutes ago‎
JOHN HOWARD'S unprecedented rejection as vice-president of the International Cricket Council has exposed the rifts running through the game – and could lead ...

Isn't it great to be able to blame Howard again?

The Australian (blog) - ‎56 minutes ago‎
JOHN Howard's past seems to have caught up with him, with his post-retirement dream job as world cricket supremo vetoed by the non-white members of the ...

Cricket turns its back on fair play

The Australian (blog) - ‎56 minutes ago‎
THE parochial cheer squad which rejoiced at the defeat of our second-longest-serving prime minister three years ago is at it again. ...


"The governance of cricket has always been troubled. But this has done damage to the reputation of the game," Mr Speed said.
more by Malcolm Speed - 1 hour ago - The Australian (1 occurrences)


Ex-PM feared for integrity on funds, power

The Australian - Malcolm Conn - ‎1 hour ago‎
IT is more than anti-colonial resentment that has led the dominant Afro-Asia bloc of the ICC to snub John Howard's nomination as president. ...

Cricket Australia stumped as ICC rules Howard out

The Australian - Malcolm Conn, James Madden - ‎1 hour ago‎
Cricket Australia will meet to discuss the International Cricket Council's refusal to accept John Howard as a candidate for president. ...

Cricket in turmoil over Howard snub

The Age - Jesse Hogan, Matt Wade - ‎1 hour ago‎
THE just-retired president of the International Cricket Council has lamented its rejection of John Howard as his successor, predicting it will trigger the ...

Ex-chief laments Howard rejection

The Age - Jesse Hogan, Matt Wade - ‎1 hour ago‎
THE just-retired president of the International Cricket Council has lamented its rejection of John Howard as a successor, predicting it will trigger the ...

Howard was just not suitable, says Zimbabwe chief

The Age - Jesse Hogan, Adam Carey - ‎1 hour ago‎
ZIMBABWE's support for an Australian or New Zealander becoming the next president of the International Cricket Council is dependent on the countries ...

Howard not giving up on presidency

The Press Association - ‎1 hour ago‎
Former Australian Prime Minister John Howard has not given up hope of becoming the next ICC president, despite his nomination being rejected by the ...

Umpire review system agreed for 2011 Cricket World Cup

BBC Sport - ‎1 hour ago‎
The International Cricket Council (ICC) has agreed in principle to use the umpire Decision Review System (DRS) at the 2011 World Cup. ...

Timeline of articles

Timeline of articles
Number of sources covering this story

Howard veto may force ICC change
‎24 minutes ago‎ - Sydney Morning Herald

Sanctity of Test cricket should be Pawar's agenda: Vengsarkar
‎4 hours ago‎ - Times of India

Diplomatic row brews over John Howard's rejection by ICC
‎9 hours ago‎ - Telegraph.co.uk

Howard snub 'an insult to Australia'
‎15 hours ago‎ - ABC Online

Cricket world rejects former PM Howard for top job
‎Jun 30, 2010‎ - The Age

Howard fails in ICC bid: report
‎Jun 29, 2010‎ - Sydney Morning Herald

John Howard is likely to lose election to be next ICC vice-president
‎Jun 29, 2010‎ - The Australian

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Get political on infrastructure

1 Jul 2010, 0524 hrs IST,T K Arun,ET Bureau

Vroom Vroom


Now Hyundai i20 CRDi with a 6-speed gearbox Car makers post record breaking sales figures in June
Small cars have once again been the driving force and new launches too have contributed significantly to the growth.

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Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's address at the Toronto meet of the leaders of the group of 20 most significant economies (G20) was well received and several of his ideas find reflection in the final communiqué .

Being taken as a responsible member of the international community has many practical advantages, but you will not be taken seriously if you do not implement at home the prescriptions that you recommend for others. That is an added reason why we have to get political on India's missing infrastructure.

Dr Manmohan Singh recommended that developing countries should invest heavily in their infrastructure, so as to boost domestic growth and global demand. Is India investing enough in its infrastructure? We are not. Is the problem that we don't have the money to invest in infrastructure?

Not at all — there is too much money sloshing through the world's financial veins for anyone to complain of monetary anaemia. Attractive , reasonably certain returns are the motive force that drives money through the financial circulatory system.

We in India have a political culture that makes it very unlikely that any money that goes into certain types of infrastructure would ever make a return. Naturally, no one in their right senses would voluntarily invest their funds in such areas.

A tourniquet is normally tied to staunch the flow of blood from a wound on an arm or a leg. If, on a perfectly normal leg, we put a tourniquet and twist it tight and then blood stops flowing down the limb beyond the restriction, why blame the blood or the heart that pumps it?

The political culture that prevents investment in some infrastructure sectors fetching any reasonable return is like a tourniquet on a healthy limb. If the limb then goes numb or, worse, begins to rot, the solution is simple and obvious: set up a GoM!

So far, we have set up Cabinet committees and expert committees on infrastructure . These comprise civil servants and technocrats. They rarely muster the courage to tell their political bosses the raw truth: what the politicians do is the problem.

All new infrastructure needs land. India has very little of unutilised, free land. Some people would have to be displaced to acquire the land for a new infrastructure project.

Displacement offers a gold mine of opportunity for the politician. You could oppose it, demand higher compensation, a better rehabilitation package, a slice of the package in used notes of small denominations that would pass off as gifts and contributions from numerous well-wishers .

In the absence of institutional funding of politics, all politicians mobilise funds for their political activity in non-institutional ways that the simple-minded call corruption.

This normally involves colluding with the bureaucracy, to sell patronage, to extort money from the well-heeled or to loot the exchequer. Once compromised, bureaucrats make money for themselves, as well. Large infrastructure projects are ideal targets for wielding all three prongs of such fund mobilisation.






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World Sport rejects BCCI's termination of agreement

G. Viswanath

The World Sport Group Mauritius (WSGM) on Wednesday told the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) that it would take necessary steps in whatever part of the world to ensure that the agreements with their business were honoured and complied with and their good name and reputation preserved.

"We hereby reject in the strongest possible terms, either your rescission or termination of our agreement with you [BCCI] dated March 25, 2009. The contract clearly outlines provisions and a process for termination," said Seamus O' Brien, Chairman and CEP of the WSGM.

On Monday, the BCCI rescinded all IPL-related television rights with the WSG India (WSGI) implying that the IPL Media Rights Agreement of March 25, 2009 for the Indian sub-continent, purportedly executed by Lalit Modi, is vitiated by fraud. The BCCI letter also said the fraud was perpetrated by the WSGI in conspiracy with the WSGM and Mr. Modi.

The WSGM's four-page letter to BCCI Secretary N. Srinivasan asserts that "The reasons given by you for doing so [to terminate the agreement] are nothing more than unsupported and unsubstantiated allegations. Not only have you failed absolutely to provide evidence on which you base your allegations, but also you have not engaged us in a single conversation or request for information to help you reach your decision, despite our numerous attempts to do so."

Mr. O'Brien pointed out to the BCCI that it was "fully aware" of the events leading to the execution of revised agreements signed on March 25, 2009, and that the WSGM "do not accept significant risk or provide services without the opportunity to make a fair return and that the 'Facilitation Deed' [$ 80 million] represents nothing more than the 'return' on this opportunity achieved by the WSGM as part of the negotiations."

Keywords: BCCIWorld Sport Group MauritiusIPL Media Rights

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http://www.thehindu.com/news/article493998.ece

Statement against Government of India's planned military offensive in adivasi-populated regions: National and international signatories

October 12, 2009

Sanhati (www.sanhati.com), a collective of activists/academics who have been working in solidarity with peoples' movements in India by providing information and analysis, took the initiative to bring together voices from around the world against the Government of India's planned military offensive in Central India. A statement (Hindi version here, Bengali version here, Telugu version here, Italian version of Letter here, Italian version of Background Note here, Spanish version of Letter, Spanish version of Background Note) and a background note were drafted in consultation with Indian activists, and duly circulated for endorsement. Readers are encouraged to endorse by mailing sanhatiindia [at] sanhati [dot] com with full name and affiliation.

To

Dr. Manmohan Singh
Prime Minister,
Government of India,
South Block, Raisina Hill,
New Delhi,
India-110 011.

We are deeply concerned by the Indian government's plans for launching an unprecedented military offensive by army and paramilitary forces in the adivasi (indigeneous people)-populated regions of Andhra Pradesh, Chattisgarh, Jharkhand, Maharashtra, Orissa and West Bengal states. The stated objective of the offensive is to "liberate" these areas from the influence of Maoist rebels. Such a military campaign will endanger the lives and livelihoods of millions of the poorest people living in those areas, resulting in massive displacement, destitution and human rights violation of ordinary citizens. To hunt down the poorest of Indian citizens in the name of trying to curb the shadow of an insurgency is both counter-productive and vicious. The ongoing campaigns by paramilitary forces, buttressed by anti-rebel militias, organised and funded by government agencies, have already created a civil war like situation in some parts of Chattisgarh and West Bengal, with hundreds killed and thousands displaced. The proposed armed offensive will not only aggravate the poverty, hunger, humiliation and insecurity of the adivasi people, but also spread it over a larger region.

Grinding poverty and abysmal living conditions that has been the lot of India's adivasi population has been complemented by increasing state violence since the neoliberal turn in the policy framework of the Indian state in the early 1990s. Whatever little access the poor had to forests, land, rivers, common pastures, village tanks and other common property resources has come under increasing attack by the Indian state in the guise of Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and other "development" projects related to mining, industrial development, Information Technology parks, etc. The geographical terrain, where the government's military offensive is planned to be carried out, is very rich in natural resources like minerals, forest wealth and water, and has been the target of large scale appropriation by several corporations. The desperate resistance of the local indigenous people against their displacement and dispossession has in many cases prevented the government-backed corporations from making inroads into these areas. We fear that the government's offensive is also an attempt to crush such popular resistances in order to facilitate the entry and operation of these corporations and to pave the way for unbridled exploitation of the natural resources and the people of these regions. It is the widening levels of disparity and the continuing problems of social deprivation and structural violence, and the state repression on the non-violent resistance of the poor and marginalized against their dispossession, which gives rise to social anger and unrest and takes the form of political violence by the poor. Instead of addressing the source of the problem, the Indian state has decided to launch a military offensive to deal with this problem: kill the poor and not the poverty, seems to be the implicit slogan of the Indian government.

We feel that it would deliver a crippling blow to Indian democracy if the government tries to subjugate its own people militarily without addressing their grievances. Even as the short-term military success of such a venture is very doubtful, enormous misery for the common people is not in doubt, as has been witnessed in the case of numerous insurgent movements in the world. We urge the Indian government to immediately withdraw the armed forces and stop all plans for carrying out such military operations that has the potential for triggering a civil war which will inflict widespread misery on the poorest and most vulnerable section of the Indian population and clear the way for the plundering of their resources by corporations. We call upon all democratic-minded people to join us in this appeal.

Click here for list of National Signatories

Click here for list of International Signatories

Detailed Background Note for the statement

Click here for Hindi version of statement [PDF, Hindi]

Click here for Bengali version of statement [PDF, Bengali]

Telugu version here

Italian version of Letter here (- Daniela Bezzi)

Italian version of Background Note here

*************

National Signatories

Arundhati Roy, Author and Activist, India

Amit Bhaduri, Professor Emeritus, Center for Economic Studies and Planning, JNU, India

Sandeep Pandey, Social Activist, N.A.P.M., India

Mahashweta Devi, Social Activist and Writer, India

Manoranjan Mohanty, Durgabai Deshmukh Professor of Social Development, Council for Social Development, India

Prashant Bhushan, Supreme Court Advocate, India

Nandini Sundar, Professor of Sociology, Delhi School of Economics, University of Delhi, India

Colin Gonzalves, Supreme Court Advocate, India

Arvind Kejriwal, Social Activist, India

Arundhati Dhuru, Activist, N.A.P.M., India

Swapna Banerjee-Guha, Department of Geography, University of Mumbai, India

Anand Patwardhan, Film Maker, India

Dipankar Bhattachararya, General Secretary, Communist Party of India (Marxist-Leninist) Liberation, India

Bernard D'Mello, Associate Editor, Economic and Political Weekly (EPW), India

Sumit Sarkar, Retired Professor of History, Delhi University, India

Tanika Sarkar, Professor of History, J.N.U., India

Gautam Navlakha, Consulting Editor, Economic and Political Weekly, India

Madhu Bhaduri, Ex-ambassador

Sumanta Banerjee, Writer, India

Dr. Vandana Shiva, Philosopher, Writer, Environmental Activist, India

M.V. Ramana, Visiting Research Scholar, Program in Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy; Program on Science and Global Security, Princeton University, USA

Dipanjan Rai Chaudhari, Retired Professor, Presidency College, India

G. N. Saibaba, Assistant Professor, University of Delhi

Amit Bhattacharyya, Professor, Department of History. Jadavpur University, Kolkata

D.N. Jha, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Delhi, India

Paromita Vohra, Devi Pictures

Sunil Shanbag, Theater Director

Saroj Giri, Lecturer in Political Science, Delhi University, India

Sudeshna Banerjee, Department of History, Jadavpur University, India

Achin Chakraborty, Professor of Economics, Institute of Development Studies, Calcutta University Alipore, India

Anand Chakravarty, Retired Professor, Delhi University, India

Anjan Chakrabarti, Professor of Economics, Calcutta University, India

Subha Chakraborty Dasgupta, Professor, Jadavpur University, India

Uma Chakravarty, Retired Professor, Delhi University, India

Kunal Chattopadhyay, Professor of Comparative Literature, Jadavpur University, India

Amiya Dev, Emiritus Professor of Comparative Literature, Jadavpur University, India

Subhash Gatade, Writer and Social Activisit, India

Abhijit Guha, Vidyasagar University, India

Kaneez Fathima, Librarian and Activist, Hyderabad

Kavita Krishnan, AIPWA, India

Gauri Lankesh, Editor, Lankesh Patrike, India

Pulin B. Nayak, Professor of Economics, Delhi School of Economics, Delhi University, India

Imrana Qadeer, Retired Professor, Centre of Social Medicine and Community Health, J.N.U., India

Neshant Quaiser, Associate Professor, Jamia Millia Islamia, Central University, Department of Sociology, India

Ramdas Rao, President, People's Union for Civil Liberties, Bangalore Unit, India

S. Jeevan Kumar, President, Human Rights Forum, Andhra Pradesh, India

V.S.Krishna, State General Secretary, Human Rights Forum, Andhra Pradesh, India

Shereen Ratnagar, Retired Professor, Center for Historical Studies, JNU, India

Rahul Varman, Professor, Department of Industrial and Management Engineering, IIT Kanpur, India

Padma Velaskar, Professor, Center for Studies in the Sociology of Education, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India

Hilal Ahmed, Associate Fellow, Center for the Studies of Development of Societies, India

Reetha Balsavar

Sriparna Bandopadhyay, India

Chinmoy Banerjee

Kaushik Banyopadhyay, Student, IIT KGP, India

Pranab Kanti Basu, Department of Economics and Politics, Vishwa Bharati University, India

Durga Bhat, PUCL, Mangalore, India

Suresh Bhat, PUCL, Mangalore, India

Arunkanti Biswas, Former Deputy Director, NEERI, India

Nisha Biswas, CGCRI, Kolkata, India

Harsh Bora, Student, Delhi Law Faculty, India

Kaushik Bose, Reader, Vidyasagar University, India

Shitansu Shekhar Chakraborty, Student, IIT Kharagpur, India

Rabin Chakraborty

Indira Chakravarthi, Public Health Researcher, India

Dipankar Chakrabarti, Aneek, India

Tapan Chakraborty, Indian Statistical Institute, India

Nandini Chandra, Member of Faculty, Delhi University, India

Navin Chandra, Visiting Senior Fellow, Institude of Human Development, India

Jagadish Chandra, New Socialist Alternative, CWI, India

Pratyush Chandra, Activist, Freelance Journalist, and Researcher, India

Pritha Chandra, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, IIT-Delhi, India

Dhiman Chatterjee, IIT Chennai, India

Aziz Choudry, Integrated Studies in Education, McGill University, Canada

Jaison C Cooper, Janakeeya Manushyavakasa Prasthanam, Kerala, India

Debarshi Das, IIT Guwahati, India

Probal Dasgupta, Linguistic Research Unit, I.S.I., India

Sangeeta Dasgupta, Centre for Historical Studies, JNU, India

Surya Shankar Dash, Independent Filmmaker, India

Ashokankur Datta, Graduate Student, I.S.I. (Planning Unit), India

Aniruddha Dutta, Gender Women's and Sexuality Studies, University of Minnesota, USA

Soumik DuttaS. Dutta, Delhi Platform, India

Madhumita Dutta, Green Youth Movement, India, Chennai

Abhee Dutt-Mazumder, TASAM, India

Durga Prasad Duvvuri, Independent Management Consultant, India

Ajit Eapen, Mumbai, IndiaSampath G, Mumbai, India

Lena Ganesh

M.S. Ganesh

Anjan Ghosh, Centre for Studies in Social Sciences, Calcutta, India

Aurnab Ghose, IISER Pune, India

Anandaroop Ghosh, India

Pothik Ghosh, Editor, Radical Notes, India

Rajeev Godara, General Secretary, Sampooran Kranti Manch, Haryana (associated with Lok Rajniti Manch), India

Siddhartha Gupta, Senior Medical Officer, Kolkata Port Trust, India

Jacob, South Asia Study Center

Manish Jain, Assistant Professor, Center for Studies of Sociology of Education, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, India

Shishir K. Jha, IIT Mumbai, India

Avinash K. Jha, Assistant Professor of Economics, Shri Ram College of Commerce, India

Partha Joarder, Scientist, Bose Institute, Kolkata, India

Bodhisattva Kar, Fellow in History, Center for Studies in Social Science, India

Ravi Kant, Advocate, Supreme Court, Delhi, India

Harish Karnick, Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, IIT Kanpur, India

Lateef Mohd Khan, General Secretary, Civil Liberties Monitoring Committee, India

Sumbul Jawed Khan, Biological Sciences and Bio. Eng. Department, IIT Kanpur, India

Reetika Khera, DSE, Delhi, India

Rajeesh Kollakkandi, indianvanguard.wordpress.com

Lenin Kumar, editor, Nisan, India

Ravi Kumar, Editor of Radical Notes and Assistant Professor, Jamia Millia Islamia, Central University, India

Abhijit Kundu, Faculty, Sociology, University of Delhi

P. Govindan kutty, Editor, People's March, Ernakulam, Kerala

Shakuntala Mahanta, IIT Guwahati

Bodhisattwa Maity, India

Parthasarathi Majumdar, Senior Professor, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, Kolkata, India

Soumik Majumder

Dishery Malakar

Julie Koppel Maldonado

Udai Malhotra, Activist, India

Mallanagoudar.P.K., Journalist, Gauri Lankesh Kannada Weekly, Bangalore, India

Prabhat Mandal, Saha Institute of Nuclear Physics, India

Dr Nandini Manjrekar, Tata Institute of Social Sciences, Mumbai

Soma Marik

John Mathen, India

Satyabrata Mitra

Siddhartha Mitra

Najeeb Mubarki, Assistant Editor, Editorial page, Economic Times, India

Dipankar Mukherjee, PDF, Delhi, India

Subhasis Mukhopadhyay, Frontier

Soumya Mukhopadhyay, Market Researcher - Independent filmmaker, Kolkata

Sakuntala Narsimhan, Writer, India

Nalini Nayak, Reader in Economics, PGDAV College, Delhi University, India

Soheb ur Rahman Niazi, Student, Jamia Milia Islamia, India

Rahul Pandey, India

Dr. Swadhin Pattanayak, India

Jai Pushp, Activist, Naujawan Bharat Sabha, India

Divya Rajagopal

Ramendra, Delhi Shramik Sangathan, India

V. Nagendra Rao, Council for Social Development, Hyderabad, India

Sankar Ray, Columnist

Partho Sarathi Ray, IISER, Kolkata

Kirity Roy, MASUM and PACTI, India

Atanu Roy

Anindyo Roy

Dunu Roy, Social Activist, India

Anil Sadgopal, Education Activist and Former Professor of Education, Delhi University, India

Sanjoy Kumar Saha, Reader, CSE department, Jadavpur University, India

Sandeep, Freelance Journalist

Dr. K. Saradamoni, Retired Academic

Madhu Sarin, Social Activist

Saurobijay Sarkar, Indian Institute of Marxist Studies

Satyam, Rahul Foundation and Dayitvbodh, India

Samriddhi Shankar Ray, Concern, IISc Bangalore, India

Sujay Sarkar

Meera Sehgal, Department of Sociology, Carleton College, USA

Jhuma Sen, Delhi

Samita Sen, Professor, Women's Studies, Jadavpur University, India

Santanu Sengupta, UDML College of Engineering, India

Ajay Kishor Shaw, Mumbai, India

Dr. Mira Shiva

Sheo Mangal Siddhantankar, General Secretary, CPIML-New Proleterian, India

Jagmohan Singh, Voices for Freedom Punjab, India

Sandeep Singh, Mumbai, India

Harindar Pal Singh Ishar, Advocate, Punjab and Haryana High Court, India

Preeti Sinha, Editor of Philhal, Patna, India

Sirajuddeen K M, P A College of Engineering, Mangalore

Oishik Sircar, Assistant Professor, Jindal Global Law School, India

Satya Sivaraman, Journalist, New Delhi, India

Yogesh Snehi, DAV College, Amritsar, India

Srinvasashala, Human Rights Organisation, Hyderabad, India

K. Sriram

Viviek Sundara, Mumbai, India

Saswati Swetlena, Programme Officer, Governance and Advocacy Unit, National Center for Advocacy Studies, India

Damayanti Talukdar, Kolkata

Divya Trivedi, The Hindu Business Line, India

Satyam Varma, Rahul Foundation

N Venugopal, Journalist, Hyderabad, India

G. Vijay, Lecturer, Department of Economics, University of Hyderabad, India

R.M. Vikas, IIT Kanpur, India

Go to top

*************

International Signatories

Noam Chomsky, Professor Emeritus of Linguistics, M.I.T., USA

David Harvey, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology, The C.U.N.Y. Graduate Center, USA

Michael Lebowitz, Director, Program in Transformative Practice and Human Development, Centro Internacional Mirana, Venezuela

John Bellamy Foster, Editor of Monthly Review and Professor of Sociology,University of Oregon Eugene,USA

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, University Professor and Director of the Institute for Comparative Literature and Society, Columbia University, USA

James C. Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science, Yale University, USA

Michael Watts, Professor of Geography and Development Studies, University of California Berkeley, USA

Mahmood Mamdani, Herbert Lehman Professor of Government, Departments of Anthropology and Political Science, Columbia University, USA

Mira Nair, Filmmaker, Mirabai Films, USA

Howard Zinn, Historian, Playwright, and Social Activisit, USA

Abha Sur, Women's Studies, M.I.T., USA

Richard Peet, Professor of Geography, Clark University, USA

Richard Levins, John Rock Professor of Population Sciences, Harvard University, USA

Gilbert Achcar, Professor of Development Studies and International Relations, School of African and Oriental Studies, University of London, U.K

Massimo De Angelis, Professor of Political Economy, University of East London, UK

Gyanendra Pandey, Arts and Sciences Distinguished Professor of History, Emory University, USA

Brian Stross, Professor of Anthropology, University of Texas Austin, USA

J. Mohan Rao, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts at Amherst, USA

Vinay Lal, Professor of History & Asian American Studies, University of California Los Angeles, USA

James Crotty, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Haluk Gerger, Political Scientist, Activist, Political Prisoner, Turkey

Justin Podur, Journalist, Canada

Hari Kunzru, Novelist, U.K.

Louis Proyect, Columbia University

Biju Mathew, Associate Professor, Rider University, USA

Balmurli Natrajan, Campaign to Stop Funding Hate and South Asia Solidarity Initiative, USA

Hari Sharma, President, South Asian Network for Secularism and Democracy, Canada

Harsh Kapoor, South Asia Citizens Web

Kim Berry, Professor of Women's Studies, Humboldt State University, USA

Shefali Chandra, Professor of South Asian History, Washington University at St Louis, USA

Angana Chatterji, Professor, California Institute of Integral Studies, San Francisco, USA

Paresh Chattopadhyay, Département de Sociologie, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada

Stan Cox, Senior Scientist, The Land Institute, USA

Martin Doornbos, Professor Emeritus, International Institute of Social Studies, Erasmus University, Netherlands

Robert A Hueckstedt, Professor, University of Virginia, USA

Louis Kampf, Professor of Literature Emeritus, MIT, USA

Emily Kawano, Director, Center for Popular Economics, USA

Arthur MacEwan, Professor Emeritus of Economics, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA

Bill Martin, Professor of Philosophy, DePaul University, USA

Ali Mir, Professor, William Paterson University, USA

Anuradha Dingwaney Needham, Longman Professor of English, Oberlin College, USA

Kavita Philip, Associate Professor, University of California, Irvine, USA

Nicholas De Genova, Assistant Professor of Anthropology and Latino Studies, Columbia University, USA

Peter Custers, Academic researcher on militarisation, Netherlands

Radha D'Souza, School of Law, University of Westminster , UK

Gary Aboud, Secretary, Fisherman and Friends of the Sea, Trinidad and Tobago

Mysara Abu-Hashem, Ph.D. Student, American University, USA

Fawzia Afzal-Khan, Professor of English, Montclair University, USA

Husna Haider Ali, People's Resistance and Labour Party, Pakistan

Nadim Asrar, Ph.D. student, University of Minnesota, USA

Margaret E Sheehan, Attorney at Law, USA

Jude Baggo, Secretary General, Cordillera Human Rights Alliance, Philippines

Arpita Banerjee, Lecturer, Whittemore School of Business and Economics, University of New Hampshire, USA

David Barsamian, Director, Alternative Radio, Boulder, Colorado, USA

Oyman Basaran, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Deepankar Basu, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Kasturi Basu, Rutgers University, USA

Sharmadip Basu, Syracuse University, USA

Joseph A Belisle

Daniela Bezzi, Journalist, Italy

Varuni Bhatia, Assistant Professor, Religous Studies Program, N.Y.U., USA

Anindya Bhattacharya, Faculty, University of York, UK

Sourav Bhattacharya, University of Pittsburgh, USA

Swati Birla, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Norma G. Biňas, Secretary-General, International League of Peoples' Struggle (ILPS) Philippine Chapter

Peter J. Bloom, Associate Professor of Film and Media Studies, University of California Santa Barbara, USA

Windel Bolinget, Secretary General, Cordillera Peoples Alliance, Phillipines

Rosalind Boyd, Centre for Developing-Area Studies, McGill University, Canada

Sister Maureen Catabian, Sisters of the Good Shepherd, Philippines

Dominique Caouette, Département de Science Politique, Université de Montréal, France

Joan Carling, Asia Indigenous Peoples Pact (AIPP), Thailand

Paula Chakravartty, Associate Professor, Department of Communications, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Ipsita Chatterjee, Assistant Professor, University of Texas, Austin, USA

Piya Chatterjee, Associate Professor of Women's Studies, University of California Riverside, USA

Ruchi Chaturvedi, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Hunter College, City University of New York, USA

Chitrabhanu Chaudhuri, Ph.D. Student, Department of Mathematics, Northwestern University, USA

Dan Clawson, Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts, Amherst, USA

Len Cooper,Victorian Branch, Communication Workers Union, Australia

Priti Gulati Cox, Artist, USA

Linda Cullen, Canada

Huma Dar, Post-Doctoral Fellow, University of British Columbia, Canada

Koel Das, UCSB, USA

Atreyi Dasgupta, MD Anderson Cancer Center, USA

Temel Demirer, Author, Turkey

Grace de Haro, APDH Human Rights Organization, Argentina

Nandini Dhar, Ph.D. student, University of Texas Austin, U.S.A.

Emily Durham-Shapiro, Student, University of Minnesotta, USA

Arindam Dutta, Associate Professor, Department of Architecture, MIT, USA

Anne Dwyer, University of Washington, US

AIlgin Erdem, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. USA

T. Robert Fetter, USA

James D. Findlay, California State University, Northridge, USA

Kade Finnoff, Doctoral Candidate, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Sara Flounders, Co-Director, International Action Center, New York, USA

Nora O. Gamolo, Peace and Collaborative Development Network, Philippines

Ricardo Lagunes Gasca, Human Rights Defender, Chiapas, Mexico

Kaushik Ghosh, University of Texas, Austin, USA

Bishnupriya Ghosh, Professor of English, University of California Santa Barbara, USA

Vinay Gidwani, Professor of Geography, Graduate Center, City University of New York, USA

Wendy Glauser, MA candidate, Political Science. York University. Toronto, Canada

Ted Glick, Climate Crisis Coalition, Climate Crisis Coalition and Chesapeake Climate Action Network, USA

Ozlem Goner, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

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Onur Gulbudak, Psychologist, Turkey

Shubhra Gururani, Associate Professor of Anthropology, York University, Canada

Anna L. Gust, University College London, UK

Shalmali Guttal, Focus on the Global South

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Amrit Singh Heer, Graduate student, Social and Political Thought, York University, Canada

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Adrienne Carey Hurley, McGill University, Canada

Zeba Imam, Ph.D. student, Texas A&M University, USA

Kajri Jain, University of Toronto, Canada

Dhruv Jain, Graduate student, York University, Canada

Mohamad Junaid, Graduate Student, Department of Anthropology, City University of New York, USA

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Sadia Khan, Classical Dancer and Educator, Karachi, Turkey

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David Kotz, Professor of Economics, UMass, Amherst, USA

Krishna MV, NIH, USAPeter Lackowski, Writer/Activist, USA

Thomas Lamarre, William Dawson Professor, East Asian Studies, McGill University, Canada

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Joseph Levine, Professor, Department of Philosophy, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

George Levinger, Department of Psychology, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

David W. Lewit, Alliance for Democracy, USA

Jinee Lokaneeta, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Drew University, USA

Ania Loomba, Catherine Bryson Professor of English, University of Pennsylvania, USA

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Thomas Masterson, Levy Economics Institute of Bard College, USA

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Victor Menotti, Executive Director, International Forum on Globalization, USA

James Miehls, Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst, USA

Stephen Miesher, Associate Professor, University of California Santa Barbara, USA

Raza Mir, Professor of Management, William Paterson University, USA

Katherine Miranda, University of Puerto Rico, Rio Piedras.

Anuradha Mittal, Executive Director, Oakland Institute, USA

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Alan Muller, Executive Director, Green Delaware, USA

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Doug Norberg, Videographer, San Francisco, USA

Sirisha Naidu, Assistant Professor of Economics, Wright State University, USA

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Nandini Nayak, SOAS, University of London, UK

Sibel Ozbudun, Academician/Author, Turkey

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Bhanu Poudyal, Contemporary Marxism Study Group, USA

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David Pugh, writer, San Francisco, USA

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Kaveri Rajaraman, Alliance for a Secular and Democratic South Asia, USA

K. Ravi Raman, Honorary Research Fellow, University of Manchester, UK

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Anna Schultz, Assistant Professor of Ethnomusicology, School of Music, University of Minnesota, USA

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Abi Sharma, President - Progressive Nepali Forum in Americas (PNEFA), USA

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Samira Shirdel, Community Advocate, Chaya: a Resource for South Asian Women, USA

Jon Short, Department of Communications Studies, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada

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Kuver Sinha, Texas A&M University, USA

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Julietta Singh, University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, USA

Preethy Sivakumar, York University, Canada

Yannis Skalidakis, Ph.D., School of Political Sciences at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece

Ajay Skaria, Associate Professor, University of Minnesota, USA

Stephen C Snyder

Nidhi Srinivas, Associate Professor of Nonprofit Management, The New School, USA

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Makere Stewart-Harawira, Department of Educational Policy Studies, University of Alberta, Canada

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Usha Titikshu, Photojournalist, Nepal

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Shivali Tukdeo, University of Illinois, USA

Sandeep Vaidya, India Support Group, Ireland

Chris Vance, York University, Canada

Rashmi Varma, University of Warwick, U.K

Ramaa Vasudevan, Dept of Economics, Colorado State University, USA

Nalini Visvanathan, Lecturer in Asian American Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston, USA

Robert Weil, University of California, Santa Cruz Assistant Professor/Lecturer (retired) and social activist

David Welsh, San Francisco (California) Labor Council, USA

Daphna Whitmore, Secretary, Workers' Party, New Zealand

T. Wignesan, Editor, Asianists' Asia, Centre de Recherches, CERPICO and CREA, France

Michael Williss, Research Officer, Australian Education Union, Australia

Ferd Wulkan, Massachusetts Society of Professors, University of Massachusetts,  Amherst, USA

Daphne Wysham, Fellow, Institute for Policy Studies, USA

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*************

BACKGROUND NOTE

It has been widely reported in the press that the Indian government is planning an unprecedented military offensive against alleged Maoist rebels, using paramilitary and counter-insurgency forces, possibly the Indian Armed Forces and even the Indian Air Force. This military operation is going to be carried out in the forested and semi-forested rural areas of the states of Andhra Pradesh, Chhattisgarh, Jharkhand,West Bengal and Maharashtra, populated mainly by the tribal (indigenous) people of India. Reportedly, the offensive has been planned in consultation with US counter-insurgency agencies. To put the Indian government's proposed military offensive in proper perspective one needs to understand the economic, social and political background to the conflict. In particular, there are three dimensions of the crisis that needs to be emphasized, because it is often overlooked: (a) the development failure of the post-colonial Indian state, (b) the continued existence and often exacerbation of the structural violence faced by the poor and marginalized, and (c) the full-scale assault on the meager resource base of the peasantry and the tribal (indigenous people) in the name of "development". Let us look at each of these in turn, but before we do so it needs to be stressed that the facts we mention below are not novel; they are well-known if only conveniently forgotten. Most of these facts were pointed out by the April 2008 Report of the Expert Group of the Planning Commission of the Indian Government (headed by retired civil servant D. Bandopadhyay) to study "development challenges in extremist affected areas".

The post-colonial Indian State, both in its earlier Nehruvian and the more recent neoliberal variant, has failed miserably to solve the basic problems of poverty, employment and income, housing, primary health care, education and inequality and social discrimination of the people of the country. The utter failure of the development strategy of the post-colonial State is the ground on which the current conflict arises. To recount some well known but oft-forgotten facts, recall that about 77 percent of the Indian population in 2004-05 had a per capita daily consumption expenditure of less than Rs. 20; that is less than 50 cents by the current nominal exchange rate between the rupee and the US dollar and about $2 in purchasing power parity terms. According to the 2001 Census, even 62 years after political independence, only about 42 percent of Indian households have access to electricity. About 80 percent of the households do not have access to safe drinking water; that is a staggering 800 million people lacking access to potable water.

What is the condition of the working people in the country? 93 percent of the workforce, the overwhelming majority of the working people in India, are what the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) called "informal workers"; these workers lack any employment security, work security and social security. About 58 percent of them work in the agricultural sector and the rest is engaged in manufacturing and services. Wages are very low and working conditions extremely onerous, leading to persistent and deep poverty, which has been increasing over the last decade and a half in absolute terms: the number of what the National Commission for Enterprises in the Unorganised Sector (NCEUS) called the "poor and vulnerable" increased from 811 million in 1999-00 to 836 million in 2004-05. Since majority of the working people still work in the agricultural sector, the economic stagnation in agriculture is a major cause for the continued poverty of the vast majority of the people. Since the Indian state did not undertake land reforms in any meaningful sense, the distribution of land remains extremely skewed to this day. Close to 60 percent of rural households are effectively landless; and extreme economic vulnerability and despair among the small and marginal peasantry has resulted in the largest wave of suicides in history: between 1997 and 2007, 182,936 farmers committed suicide. This is the economic setting of the current conflict.

But in this sea of poverty and misery, there are two sections of the population that are much worse off than the rest: the Scheduled Caste (SC) and Scheduled Tribes (ST) population. On almost all indicators of social well being, the SCs and STs are worse off than the general population: poverty rates are higher, landlessness is higher, infant mortality rates are higher, levels of formal education are lower, and so on. To understand this differential in social and economic deprivation we need to look at the second aspect of the current crisis that we had alluded to: structural violence.

There are two dimensions of this structural violence: (a) oppression, humiliation and discrimination along the lines of caste and ethnicity and (b) regular harassment, violence and torture by arms of the State. For the SC and ST population, therefore, the violence of poverty, hunger and abysmal living conditions has been complemented and worsened by the structural violence that they encounter daily. It is the combination of the two, general poverty and the brutality and injustice of the age old caste system, kept alive by countless social practices despite numerous legislative measures by the Indian state, that makes this the most economically deprived and socially marginalized section of the Indian population. This social discrimination, humiliation and oppression is of course very faithfully reflected in the behavior of the police and other law-enforcing agencies of the State towards the poor SC and ST population, who are constantly harassed, beaten up and arrested on the slightest pretext. For this population, therefore, the State has not only totally neglected their economic and social development, it is an oppressor and exploiter. While the SC and ST population together account for close to a quarter of the Indian population, they are the overwhelming majority in the areas where the Indian government proposes to carry out its military offensive against alleged Maoist rebels. This, then, is the social background of the current conflict.

This brings us to the third dimension of the problem: unprecedented attack on the access of the marginalized and poor to common property resources. Compounding the persistent poverty and the continuing structural violence has been the State's recent attempt to usurp the meager resource base of the poor and marginalized, a resource base that was so far largely outside the ambit of the market. The neoliberal turn in the policy framework of the Indian state since the mid 1980s has, therefore, only further worsened the problems of economic vulnerability and social deprivation. Whatever little access the poor had to forests, land, rivers, common pastures, village tanks and other common property resources to cushion their inevitable slide into poverty and immiserization has come under increasing attack by the Indian state in the guise of so-called development projects: Special Economic Zones (SEZs) and other "development" projects related to mining, industrial development, Information Technology parks, etc. Despite numerous protests from people and warnings from academics, the Indian State has gone ahead with the establishment of 531 SEZs. The SEZs are areas of the country where labour and tax laws have been consciously weakened, if not totally abrogated by the State to "attract" foreign and domestic capital; SEZs, almost by definition, require a large and compact tract of land, and thus inevitably mean the loss of land, and thus livelihood, by the peasantry. To the best of our knowledge, there have been no serious, rigorous cost-benefit analysis of these projects to date; but this does not prevent the government from claiming that the benefits of these projects, in terms of employment generation and income growth, will far outweigh the costs of revenue loss from foregone taxes and lost livelihoods due to the assault on land.

The opposition to the acquisition of land for these SEZ and similar projects have another dimension to it. Dr. Walter Fernandes, who has studied the process of displacement in post-independence India in great detail, suggests that around 60 million people have faced displacement between 1947 and 2004; this process of displacement has involved about 25 million hectares of land, which includes 7 million hectares of forests and 6 million hectares of other common property resources. How many of these displaced people have been resettled? Only one in every three. Thus, there is every reason for people not tobelieve the government's claims that those displaced from their land will be, in any meaningful sense, resettled. This is one of the most basic reasons for the opposition to displacement and dispossession.

But, how have the rich done during this period of unmitigated disaster for the poor? While the poor have seen their incomes and purchasing power tumble down precipitously in real terms, the rich have, by all accounts, prospered beyond their wildest dreams since the onset of the liberalization of the Indian economy. There is widespread evidence from recent research that the levels of income and wealth inequality in India has increased steadily and drastically since the mid 1980s. A rough overview of this growing inequality is found by juxtaposing two well known facts: (a) in 2004-05, 77 percent of the population spent less than Rs. 20 a day on consumption expenditure; and (b) according to the annual World Wealth Report released by Merrill Lynch and Capgemini in 2008, the millionaire population in India grew in 2007 by 22.6 per cent from the previous year, which is higher than in any other country in the world.

It is, thus, the development disaster of the Indian State, the widening levels of disparity and the continuing problems of social deprivation and structural violence when compounded by the all-out effort to restrict access to common property resources that, according to the Expert Group of the Planning Commission, give rise to social anger, desperation and unrest. In almost all cases the affected people try to ventilate their grievances using peaceful means of protest; they take our processions, they sit on demonstrations, they submit petitions. The response of the State is remarkably consistent in all these cases: it cracks down on the peaceful protestors, sends in armed goons to attack the people, slaps false charges against the leaders and arrests them and often also resorts to police firing and violence to terrorize the people. We only need to remember Singur, Nandigram, Kalinganagar and countless other instances where peaceful and democratic forms of protest were crushed by the state with ruthless force. It is, thus, the action of the State that blocks off all forms of democratic protest and forces the poor and dispossessed to take up arms to defend their rights, as has been pointed out by social activists like Arundhati Roy. The Indian government's proposed military offensive will repeat that story all over again. Instead of addressing the source of the conflict, instead of addressing the genuine grievances of the marginalized people along the three dimensions that we have pointed to, the Indian state seems to have decided to opt for the extremely myopic option of launching a military offensive.

It is also worth remembering that the geographical terrain, where the government's military offensive is planned, is very well-endowed with natural resources like minerals, forest wealth, biodiversity and water resources, and has of late been the target of systematic usurpation by several large, both Indian and foreign, corporations. So far, the resistance of the local indigenous people against their displacement and dispossession has prevented the government-backed corporates from exploiting the natural resources for their own profits and without regard to ecological and social concerns. We fear that the government's offensive is also an attempt to crush such democratic and popular resistance against dispossession and impoverishment; the whole move seems to be geared towards facilitating the entry and operation of these large corporations and paving the way for unbridled exploitation of the natural resources and people of these regions.

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http://sanhati.com/excerpted/1824/

September 3, 2009

Healthcare in India: Features of one of the most privatised systems in the world
Vedic Village: A long history of brutality behind the final destruction
Bastar rally of BSKSS: Demands, attitude towards Maoists and established activism
PDS: cash instead of food, and other dismantling measures since liberalisation
Report on a recent mass rally against land acquisition in Hazaribagh, Jharkhand
Articles reporting effects of the current drought in India
Workers' Struggle at Paharpur Cooling Towers, West Bengal
Lokayat group, Pune: Literature and activities
Delhi public meeting and statement on impending offensive of the government

August 16, 2009

The 2009 Budget and the Political Economy of the Indian state - Ramaa Vasudevan
Hating Mayawati's statues – a story of false concerns and true fears - an inquiry into the elite mind - Garga Chatterjee, Sanhati
Political struggle within the CPIM - Dipanjan Rai Chaudhuri
The Land Acquisition (Amendment) Bill: Ongoing debates and perspectives
Update newsletter: Aspects of Indian agriculture, land reforms, and imperialism
Satellite data shows groundwater depletion in North India: implications for political economy
A basic orientation in the US healthcare debate - Dipankar Basu, Sanhati
The UPA government's surreptitious attempts to dilute NREGA
A new trend: Industrialized nations lease fertile land in Africa to meet food demands

July 30, 2009

Labour Standards and Globalisation: A Case Study of Implementing Minimum Wages - Manali Chakrabarti, Sanhati
Orissa migrants: Back home with the recession, from the brick-kilns of A.P. and the looms of Surat
The Great Himalayan Watershed: A review of the politics of water in the subcontinent
Water wars in Faridabad: The retreat of the State and the politics of patronisation
Untouchables in Indian polity, 1956-2000: A review from a mainstream political angle
Raigad, Maharashtra: Anti-SEZ movement stalls Reliance
Union Budget, 2009: What about Industry?
Hungary: "Where we went wrong" - An interview of GM Tamás

July 16, 2009

The first summit of the fastest growing developing economies (BRIC): An economic critique - Sushovan Dhar
Bad Omens for the Lower Ganges-Brahmaputra Delta
Open letters between PCC-CPIML and CPI(Maoist) on Lalgarh
Peasantology: An informal introduction
An economic survey of the Mumbai population
The Indian approach to climate and energy policy

India's secret torture chambers: A book and an essay
Soft attacks on media freedom:The "correct information" and Ambika Soni
ShramikShakti Newsletter: June-July 2009
Giovanni Arrighi: An interview and an obituary

June 29, 2009

The Dark Side: A Political Travelogue through Orissa - Shubhranshu Choudhary
Verdict 2009 and the Left: Key Issues and the Road Ahead - Kavita Krishnan, Liberation
An interview with Christophe Jaffrelot on Indian politics, communalism and Dalit movement
The Age of the Everyday Billionaire - P. Sainath
Economic Recovery: Is It Time For a Mid-Course Correction? - New School Lectures
Peru: Blood Flows in the Amazon - James Petras
Brazil's economy and the end of the decoupling myth - Renaud Lambert
Venezuela: "A process of nationalisations" after the referendum - Federico Fuentes

June 13, 2009

The "People's Movement Left" and Rammanohar Lohia: an evaluation at a time of crisis - Amit Basole, Sanhati
Coolies under attack: What to make of the racist violence on Indians in Australia? - Garga Chatterjee, Sanhati
Price of rice, price of power - P. Sainath
Planning Commission recommends dismantling of Public Distribution System
Unicef attacks India's record on poverty
Interim Report of Fact-finding Team on Demolition of VCA in Chhattisgarh
Hurricane Aila: Pictures from the Sunderbans, and details for relief contribution
Lalgarh: Conflicting Aims, Difficult Days - Dipanjan Rai Chaudhuri
Blood at the Blockade: Peru's Indigenous Uprising
Global Recession News
EU elections: The decline of social democracy

May 31, 2009

Gravest displacement, Bravest resistance: The struggle of adivasis of Bastar, Chhattisgarh against imperialist corporate landgrab - Sudha Bharadwaj. Columnist, Sanhati. Journal.
Binayak Sen's release: A critical appraisal through the lens of political economy - Sanhati Statement. Journal.
The Travails of Malati - Dipanjan Rai Chaudhuri. Columnist, Sanhati.
Crossed and Crucified: Parivar's war against minorities - A PUCL and Kashipur Solidarity Group report. Campaign Literature.
A Human Rights Checklist for India - K.S. Jacob. Articles.
Javed Iqbal's open letter to the police after the destruction of Vanvasi Chetna Ashram - Articles
Social Security Benefits and the New Pension Scheme - Ratan Khasnabis. Articles.
The Social Meaning of Pensions - Michael Perelman. Articles.
Financialisation and the Tendency to Stagnation - Bernard de Mello. Articles.

May 17, 2009

Relations of Production and Modes of Surplus Extraction in India: An Aggregate Study - Dipankar Basu and Amit Basole, Journal.
Lok Sabha Election 2009: Summary of results
Latest arrests under Chhattisgarh Special Public Safety Act (CSPSA): A look at the draconian law - Sudha Bharadwaj's column.
No country for the brave - The dark heart within the glory of Indian democracy - Bhaswati Chakravorty
UCIL plans expansion of Uranium extraction in Jadugoda: EIA/EMP reports unavailable - A report from JOAR
India, Suddenly Starved for Investment - A NYTimes Report
Photos and report from Raipur program protesting Binayak Sen's 2nd year in jail
Sponge Iron Industries in Bengal and Community Devastation - A Nagarik Mancha Study
Policies on industrial land and the burgeoning real estate scam - A Nagarik Mancha study
Singur update: Life under a brand new Trinamul panchayat - A report from Citizens Initiative
Defamed in death - Mandakranta Sen and the scurrilous implications of the CD on Tapasi Malik - Shamita Basu
ShramikShakti Newsletter: January 2009
ShramikShakti Newsletter: March 2009
ShramikShakti Newsletter: May 2009

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Articles from May 3, 2009 - August 2, 2008

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Lalgarh Movement – Mass uprising of adivasis in West Bengal

Feb 23 2010: The Silda attack: Understanding the role of the EFR camp in reoccupation strategies
Feb 23 2010: Lalmohan Tudu and two others murdered by CRPF
Jan 11 2010: Lalgarh - An account from Forum Against Monopolistic Aggression (FAMA) [PDF, Bengali] »

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Lok Sabha Elections 2009

June 29: Verdict 2009 and the Left: Key Issues and the Road Ahead - Kavita Krishnan, CPIML(Liberation)
June 13: The West's fantasies of a free-market "New India"
May 25: A lesson for the revolutionary Left - Anol Mitra, Sanhati
May 25: Topic CPIM - A few thoughts - Pinaki Mitra, Sanhati. [PDF, Bengali] »
May 21: The Left and Electoral Politics in India - Dipankar Basu, Sanhati
May 19: Enabling Congress to rule the country, CPI(M) goes into "ostrich mode" - PS Ray, Pinaki Chaudhuri - Sanhati
May 19: Wave against big corporate aggression: Incomplete Alienation from the CPI(M) - Dipanjan Rai Chaudhuri
May 19: Karat(e) against his own follies - Sankar Ray

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http://hashiya.blogspot.com/2010/06/blog-post_25.html
AP YET TO OPEN: A Kashmiri peeps out from a doorway as a policeman stands guard during a curfew in Srinagar on Thursday. J&K ministers are camping in different parts of the State to restore peace in the troubled areas.

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Indian Premier League

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Indian Premier League
DLF IPL logo.png
Logo of the Indian Premier League
CountriesIndia
AdministratorBCCI
HeadquarterMumbai, Maharashtra, India
FormatTwenty20
First tournament 2008
Last tournament 2010
Tournament format Double round-robin and Knockout
Number of teams8
Current championChennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings
Most successfulRajasthan Royals colours.svg Rajasthan Royals,

Deccan Chargers colours.svg Deccan Chargers and

Chennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings (1 title each)
QualificationTwenty20 Champions League
Most runsChennai Super Kings colours.svg Suresh Raina (1375)[1]
Most wicketsDeccan Chargers colours.svg R. P. Singh (51)[2]
WebsiteIPLT20.com

The Indian Premier League (often abbreviated as IPL), is a Twenty20 cricket competition initiated by the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) headquartered in Mumbai[3][4] and supervised by BCCI Vice President Chirayu Amin, chairman & commissioner for IPL, and CEO, Sundar Raman. It presently includes 8 teams (franchises) consisting of players from different countries. It was started after an altercation between the BCCI and the Indian Cricket League.[5]

In 2010, IPL became the first sporting event ever to be broadcast live on the popular video sharing website YouTube.[6] Its brand value was estimated to be around $4.13 billion (over Rs 18,000 crore) the same year.[7][8] According to global sports salaries review, IPL is the second highest-paid league, based on first-team salaries on a pro rata basis, second only to the NBA. It is estimated that the average salary of an IPL player over a year would be £2.5 million.[9]

Contents

[hide]

[edit] History

[edit] First season

A Chennai vs Kolkata match in progress at the M.A. Chidambaram Cricket Stadium

The inaugural season of the tournament started on 18 April 2008 and lasted for 46 days with 59 matches scheduled, out of which 58 took place and 1 was washed out due to rain. The final was played in DY Patil Stadium, Nerul, Navi Mumbai. Every team played each other both at home and away in a round robin system. The top four ranking sides progressed to the knockout stage of semi-finals followed by a final. Rajasthan Royals defeated Chennai Super Kings in a last ball thriller and emerged as the inaugural IPL champions.

[edit] Second season

The 2009 season coincided with the general elections in India. Owing to concerns regarding players' security, the venue was shifted to South Africa. The format of the tournament remained the same as the inaugural one. Deccan Chargers, who finished last in the first season, came out as eventual winners defeating the Royal Challengers Bangalore in the final.

[edit] Third season

The third season opened in January 2010 with the auction for players. 66 players were on offer but only 11 players were sold. In this season, defending Champions Deccan Chargers did not play at their preferred home location of Hyderabad or Visakhapatnam due to the ongoing political crisis in the region. The new bases for the champions this season were Nagpur, Navi Mumbai and Cuttack. Four teams qualified for the semi-finals. The first semi-final was won by Mumbai Indians who defeated Bangalore Royal Challengers by 35 runs. Chennai Super Kings defeated Deccan Chargers in the second semi-final. The final was played between Chennai Super Kings and Mumbai Indians. Chennai Super Kings won by a margin of 22 runs.

[edit] Fourth season

On 21 March 2010, at Chennai it was announced that 2 new teams from Pune and Kochi will be added to the IPL from next season. This will increase the number of franchises from 8 to 10 and the number of matches from 60 to 94 if the same format is used. However, the bid around the Kochi franchisee turned controversial resulting in the resignation of minister, Shashi Tharoor from the Central Government and investigations by various departments of the Government of India into the financial dealings of IPL and the other existing franchisees. Later, Lalit Modi was also removed from IPL chairmanship by BCCI.

[edit] Franchises

The winning bidders for the eight franchises were announced on 24 January 2008.[10] While the total base price for auction was US $400 million, the auction fetched US $723.59 million.[11]

On 21 March 2010, Pune and Kochi were unveiled as the two new franchises for the fourth edition of the Indian Premier League. The base price was $225 million. While Pune was bought by Sahara Adventure Sports Group for $370 million, the Kochi franchise was bought by Rendezvous Sports World Limited for $333.3 million. The process was to have been completed on March 7 but was postponed by two weeks after many bidders and the BCCI objected to stiff financial clauses.[12] The second franchise auction fetched total $703 million.

Franchise↓ Owner(s)↓Captain↓ Price (USD)↓ Price (Rupees)↓ Location Map
Mumbai Indians colours.svg Mumbai Indians
Mukesh Ambani (Owner of Reliance Industries) Sachin Tendulkar$ 112.9 m Rs. 445 Cr 
Royal Challengers Bangalore colours.svg Royal Challengers Bangalore Vijay Mallya (UB Group)Anil Kumble $ 111.6 mRs. 440 Cr 
Deccan Chargers colours.svg Deccan Chargers
Deccan Chronicle (Gayatri Reddy)Adam Gilchrist $ 107.0  mRs. 422 Cr 
Chennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings India Cements (N.Srinivasan)Mahendra Singh Dhoni $ 91.90 mRs. 359 Cr 
Delhi Daredevils colours.svg Delhi Daredevils GMR GroupGautam Gambhir$ 84.0 m Rs. 331 Cr 
Kings XI Punjab colours.svg Kings XI Punjab
Ness Wadia, Preity Zinta, Mohit Burman , Gaurav Burman (Dabur), Karan Paul (Apeejay Surendera Group), Aditya and Arvind Khanna Kumar Sangakkara$ 76.0 mRs. 300 Cr 
Kolkata Knight Riders colours.svg Kolkata Knight Riders
Red Chillies Entertainment (Shahrukh Khan, Gauri Khan, Juhi Chawla and Jai Mehta) Sourav Ganguly$ 75.1 mRs. 296 Cr 
Rajasthan Royals colours.svg Rajasthan Royals Emerging Media (Lachlan Murdoch, A.R Jha and co.), Shilpa Shetty, Raj Kundra, Suresh and Kavita Chellaram Shane Warne$ 67.0 mRs. 264 Cr 
 Pune Sahara-$ 370.0 mRs 1,702 Cr 
 Kochi Rendezvous Sports Limited-$ 333.0 mRs 1,572 Cr 

[edit] Winners

SeasonWinnersRunners-upTeams
2008Rajasthan Royals colours.svg Rajasthan Royals Chennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings 8
2009Deccan Chargers colours.svg Deccan Chargers Royal Challengers Bangalore colours.svg Royal Challengers Bangalore 8
2010Chennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings Mumbai Indians colours.svg Mumbai Indians 8

[edit] Performance of teams

Team↓ Span↓Titles↓ Matches↓Won↓ Lost↓No Result↓ Win %↓For (r/o)↓ Against (r/o)↓Best↓ Worst↓
Chennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings
2008-2010
1
47
26
20
1
56.38
4,752 / 574.4
4,475 / 569.1
Champions
Semi-finals
Deccan Chargers colours.svg Deccan Chargers
2008-2010
1
46
19
27
0
41.29
4,637 / 580.2
4,694 / 582.4
Champions
8th of 8
Delhi Daredevils colours.svg Delhi Daredevils
2008-2010
0
44
24
19
1
54.56
4,219 / 524.5
4,330 / 547.0
Semi-finals
5th of 8
Kings XI Punjab colours.svg Kings XI Punjab
2008-2010
0
43
21
22
0
48.83
4,251 / 531.1
4,274 / 529.1
Semi-finals
8th of 8
Kolkata Knight Riders colours.svg Kolkata Knight Riders
2008-2010
0
42
16
24
2
39.74
3,602 / 491.3
3,585 / 459.3
6th of 8
8th of 8
Mumbai Indians colours.svg Mumbai Indians
2008-2010
0
44
23
20
1
52.28
3,977 / 505.3
3,898 / 523.1
Runners-up
7th of 8
Rajasthan Royals colours.svg Rajasthan Royals
2008-2010
1
44
25
18
1
55.81
4,289 / 554.2
4,213 / 564.2
Champions
7th of 8
Royal Challengers Bangalore colours.svg Royal Challengers Bangalore
2008-2010
0
46
21
25
0
45.65
4,263 / 587.3
4,521 / 574.5
Runners-up
7th of 8

[edit] Player signings

The first players' auctions were held on 2008. The IPL placed icon status on a select few marquee Indian players. These players were Rahul Dravid, Sachin Tendulkar, Saurav Ganguly, Yuvraj Singh, and Virender Sehwag. VVS Laxman initially named an icon player, later voluntarily opted out of his icon status to give his team (Deccan Chargers) more money to bid for players.[13] For the second season, auctions were also held, but free signings taking place in the off-season by franchises led to calls for a draft-like system where the lowest ranked teams would be given a first opportunity to sign players.

[edit] Television rights and sponsorships

The IPL is predicted to bring the BCCI income of approximately US$1.6 billion, over a period of five to ten years. All of these revenues are directed to a central pool, 40% of which will go to IPL itself, 54% to franchisees and 6% as prize money. The money will be distributed in these proportions until 2017, after which the share of IPL will be 50%, franchisees 45% and prize money 5%. The IPL signed up Kingfisher Airlines as the official umpire partner for the series in a Rs. 106 crore (approximately £15 million) deal. This deal sees the Kingfisher Airlines brand on all umpires' uniforms and also on the giant screens during third umpire decisions.[14]

[edit] Television rights

On 15 January 2008 it was announced that a consortium consisting of India's Sony Entertainment Television network and Singapore-based World Sport Group secured the global broadcasting rights of the Indian Premier League.[15] The record deal has a duration of ten years at a cost of US $1.026 billion. As part of the deal, the consortium will pay the BCCI US $918 million for the television broadcast rights and US $108 million for the promotion of the tournament.[16] This deal was challenged in the Bombay High Court by IPL, and got the ruling on its side. After losing the battle in court, Sony Entertainment Television signed a new contract with BCCI with Sony Entertainment Television paying Rs 8,700 crore (US$ 1.85 billion) for 10 years. One of the reasons for payment of this huge amount is seen as the money required to subsidize IPL's move to South Africa which will be substantially more than the previous IPL. IPL had agreed to subsidize the difference in operating cost between India and South Africa as it decided to move to the African nation after the security concerns raised because of its coincidence with India's general elections.

20% of these proceeds would go to IPL, 8% as prize money and 72% would be distributed to the franchisees. The money would be distributed in these proportions until 2012, after which the IPL would go public and list its shares (But recently in March 2010, IPL decided not to go public).[17]

Sony-WSG then re-sold parts of the broadcasting rights geographically to other companies. Below is a summary of the broadcasting rights around the world.

On 4 March 2010 ITV announced it had secured the United Kingdom television rights for the 2010 Indian Premier League. ITV will televise 59 of the 60 IPL matches on its ITV4 free to air channel.[18]

Winning BidderRegional Broadcast RightsTerms of Deal
Sony/World Sport Group
 India 10 years at Rs 8,700 crore (US$ 1.85 billion) (revised)[15]
ONE HD Australia: Free-to-air HD and SD television. Owned by Network TEN. 5 years at AUD 10-15 Million.[19]
Sky Network Television New Zealand Terms not released
PCCW Hong Kong: Broadcast on Now Sports. 2 years, terms not released.
StarHub Singapore: Broadcast on Cricket Extra. Terms not released
Astro Malaysia: Broadcast Astro Box Office Sport. Terms not released
SuperSport
Central Africa

 South Africa  Niger

Terms not released
Arab Digital Distribution United Arab Emirates,  Bahrain,  Iraq,  Jordan,  Kuwait,  Lebanon,  Oman,  Qatar, Palestinian territories Palestine,  Saudi Arabia,  Syria,  Turkey,  Algeria,  Morocco,  Tunisia,  Egypt,  Sudan,  Libya,  Nigeria

Broadcast rights on ADD's CricOne

10 Years, terms not released.[20]
GEO Super
 Pakistan Terms not released
Willow TVRights to distribute on television, radio, broadband and Internet, for the IPL in North America. 5 years, terms not released.[21]
DirecTV  United States: Exclusive broadcast rights on CricketTicket. Terms not released
Asian Television Network
 Canada: Aired on Pay-per-view channel. Aired on XM Radio's ATN-Asian Radio as well. 5 years, terms not released.[22]
SportsMax West Indies Cricket BoardCaribbean Terms not released
ITV
 United Kingdom: Broadcast on ITV4. Terms not released

[edit] Sponsorships

India's biggest property developer DLF Group paid US$50 million to be the title sponsor of the tournament for 5 years from 2008 to 2013.[23]

Other five-year sponsorship agreements include a deal with motorcycle maker Hero Honda worth $22.5-million, one with PepsiCo worth $12.5-million, and a deal with beer and airline conglomerate Kingfisher at $26.5-million.[24]

[edit] Revenue and Profits

The UK-based brand consultancy, Brand Finance, has valued the IPL at Rs 18,500 crore (US$ 3.94 billion) in 2010.[25] It was valued at U$2.01 billion in 2009 by the same consultancy.[26]

There are disputed figures for the profitability of the teams. One analyst said that four teams out of the eight made a profit in 2009.[27] While the London Times said that all but Kings XI Punjab made a profit.[28]

In 2010, the IPL expects to have 80 official merchandising deals. It has signed a deal with Swiss watchmaker Bandelier to make official watches for the IPL.[29]

According to a recent study by a UK-based brand valuation consultancy, the brand value of the IPL has more than doubled to USD 4.13 billion (over Rs 18,000 crore) from USD 2.01 billion in 2009.[30]

The franchises have been a part of this growth. Chennai Super Kings, who were ranked fourth last year, has emerged the most valued franchise in 2010. The CSK franchise has moved up the ladder to number one with a valuation of USD 48.4 million. The Kolkata Knight Riders co-owned by Bollywood actor Shah Rukh Khan comes in second with a valuation of USD 46 million and the Rajasthan Royals, co-owned by Bollywood actress Shilpa Shetty comes in third with USD 45.2 million. The Royal Challengers Bangalore, owned by Vijay Mallya, is ranked fourth with a valuation of USD 41.9 million and is followed by the Mumbai Indians (USD 40.8 million), Delhi Daredevils (USD 40.5 million) and Kings XI Punjab ( USD 36.1 million). The Deccan Chargers are at the base with a valuation of USD 34.4 million.[31]

RankFranchise Brand Value
1Chennai Super Kings colours.svg Chennai Super Kings $ 48.4 m
2Kolkata Knight Riders colours.svg Kolkata Knight Riders $ 46 m
3Rajasthan Royals colours.svg Rajasthan Royals $ 45.2 m
4Royal Challengers Bangalore colours.svg Royal Challengers Bangalore $ 41.9 m
5Mumbai Indians colours.svg Mumbai Indians $ 40.8 m
6Delhi Daredevils colours.svg Delhi Daredevils $ 40.5 m
7Kings XI Punjab colours.svg Kings XI Punjab $ 36.1 m
8Deccan Chargers colours.svg Deccan Chargers $ 34.4 m

[edit] Official IPL Mobile Applications

DCI Mobile Studios (A division of Dot Com Infoway Limited), in conjunction with Sigma Ventures of Singapore, have jointly acquired the rights to be the exclusive Mobile Application partner and rights holder for the Indian Premier League cricket matches worldwide for the next 8 years (including the 2017 season). Recently, they have released the IPL T20 Mobile applications for iPhone, Nokia Smartphones and Blackberry devices. Soon it will be made available across all other major Mobile platforms including the Android, Windows Mobile, Palm & others.[32]

[edit] Global following

In India, the IPL has become one of the most popular events of the year[33]. In the first season, games were played every night (including weekdays) during Indian prime-time and were broadcast live. The IPL was the most watched TV program in India.

IPL drew positive reactions from the rest of the world also. In Pakistan, the reception was described as "massive". The matches were telecast live in GEO Super. The matches also generated interest in Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, despite only one Bangladeshi player being involved. The following in the subcontinental nations was aided by the prime time telecast of the matches as they belong to adjacent time zones.

The IPL became a big hit in South Africa due to a large composition of South Asians in their population.Another reason for the success is that the second edition of IPL was hosted at South Africa drawing massive crowds from the country as well as the other countries in the subcontinent.

The IPL did not garner much interest in Australia and New Zealand due to time differences. However, in recent times the IPL has gained a much larger fan-base in these two countries.

Snap polls indicated that more than 48 million people watched the telecast of the IPL 2008 final between Rajasthan Royals and Chennai Super Kings, more than 40 million people saw the Rajasthan Royals vs Delhi Daredevils match, whereas the second semi-final between Chennai Super Kings and Kings XI Punjab attracted an audience of 29 million.[34]

The third season of IPL saw interest rise dramatically in the United Kingdom. This was, in part, due to TV coverage switching to free to view channel ITV4. Previous editions of IPL were aired on the now defunct channel Setanta (pay to view channel), which entered administration in 2009. James Macleod stated, "We are delighted with the viewing figures for the IPL so far. The ratings for ITV4s coverage have been around seven or eight times those achieved by Setanta last year, and we're delighted to be bringing the competition to a wider audience". Lalit Modi, former Chairman and Commissioner of IPL, also expressed immense satisfaction on the way IPL has been accepted by the British audience. "ITV beats Sky Sports over the weekend in number of viewers. This is great going. The ITV numbers are double that of rugby league. This is huge by all imaginations. UK figures for viewership on ITV already 10 times that of last year. This is just fantastic news," he said.[35][36]

[edit] Rules

There are five ways that a franchise can acquire a player. In the annual auction, buying domestic players, signing uncapped players, through trading and buying replacements.[37][38] In the trading window the player can only be traded with his consent. The franchise will have to pay the difference between the old contract price and the new contract price. If the new contract is worth more than the older one then the difference will be shared between the player and the franchise selling the player.[39]

Some of the Team composition rules are:

  • Minimum squad strength of 16 players plus one physio and a coach.
  • No more than 8 foreign players in the squad and at most 4 in the playing XI.For the 2009 edition franchises are allowed 10 foreign players in the squad. The number allowed in the playing XI remains unchanged at 4.
  • As this is domestic cricket so minimum of 8 local players must be included in each squad.
  • A minimum of 2 players from the BCCI under-22 pool in each squad.

Some of the differences to international Twenty20 cricket:

  • A difference to international cricket is a timeout. It gives the players an opportunity to strategise and take a drink during the strict 2 minutes, 30 seconds time limit. Each team is awarded two timeouts per innings totalling to four timeouts for the whole game. The teams can take the timeout when instructed, but is necessary to take it at the end of 9th and 16th over.
  • IPL is also known for having commercials during the game, hence there is no time limit for teams to complete their innings. However, there may be a penalty if the umpires find teams misusing this privilege at their own choice.

The total spending cap for a franchisee in the first player auction was US $5 million. Under-22 players are to be remunerated with a minimum annual salary of US $20,000 while for others it is US $50,000. The most expensive players in the IPL to date are Andrew Flintoff and Kevin Pietersen at US $1.55 million each.

[edit] Official website

The IPL negotiated a contract with the Canadian company Live Current Media Inc. to run and operate its portals and the minimum guarantee has been negotiated at US $50 million over the next 10 years.[40] The official website of the tournament is www.iplt20.com.

Incorporating popular forms of social media into the third season of the IPL, the website now contains a more holistic presence across all online mediums. The website apart from featuring new additions to empower user interaction, has encouraged a wider range of websites around IPL like IPL Tracker [1] and IPL Mag [2] amongst other more traditional reporting websites.

[edit] Statistics and records

[edit] Controversies

The BCCI had found itself in the middle of many conflicts with various cricket boards around the world as a result of the IPL. The main point of contention was that signed players should always be available to their country for international tours, even if it overlaps with the IPL season. To address this, the BCCI officially requested that the ICC institute a time period in the International Future Tours Program solely for the IPL season. This request was not granted at a subsequent meeting held by the ICC.[41]

[edit] Conflicts with the England and Wales Cricket Board

Because the inaugural IPL season coincided with the County Championship season as well as New Zealand's tour of England, the ECB and county cricket clubs raised their concerns to the BCCI over players. The ECB made it abundantly clear that they would not sign No Objection Certificates for players—a prerequisite for playing in the IPL. Chairmen of the county clubs also made it clear that players contracted to them were required to fulfill their commitment to their county. As a result of this, Dimitri Mascarenhas was the only English player to have signed with the IPL for the 2008 season.[42]

A result of the ECB's concerns about players joining the IPL, was a proposed radical response of creating their own Twenty20 tournament that would be similar in structure to the IPL. The league — titled the English Premier League — would feature 21 teams in three groups of seven and would occur towards the end of the summer season.[43] The ECB enlisted the aid of Texas billionaire Allen Stanford to launch the proposed league.[44] Stanford was the brains behind the successful Stanford 20/20, a tournament that has run twice in the West Indies. On 17 February 2009, when news of the fraud investigation against Stanford became public, the ECB and WICB withdrew from talks with Stanford on sponsorship.[45][46] On February 20 the ECB announced it has severed its ties with Stanford and cancelled all contracts with him.[47]

[edit] Conflicts with Cricket Australia

The BCCI also experienced run-ins with Cricket Australia (CA) over player availability for Australia's 2008 tour of the West Indies and CA's desire for global protection of their sponsors. CA had feared that sponsors of the IPL (and its teams) that directly competed with their sponsors would jeopardize already existing arrangements. This issue was eventually resolved[48] and it was also agreed upon that Australian players would be fully available for the West Indies tour.

[edit] Conflicts with the Pakistan Cricket Board

Many players from the Pakistan Cricket Team who were not offered renewed central contracts (or decided to reject new contracts) decided to join the rival Indian Cricket League (ICL). Two such players—Naved-ul-Hasan and Mushtaq Ahmed also held contracts with English Counties. The PCB decided to issue No Objection Certificates for these players to play with their county teams on the basis that since they were no longer contracted to the PCB, there was no point in not granting them their NOCs. The latter did not sit well with the BCCI, as it went against the hard line stance they had taken on players who joined the ICL.[citation needed]

After the 2008 Mumbai attacks, the Pakistan government deemed it unsafe for its players to travel to India for the IPL. However, when the IPL was shifted to South Africa, the Pakistani players requested the IPL organizers and Lalit Modi to allow them to play but they refused by reasoning that the squads had already been decided and there was no room for Pakistani players.[citation needed]

Recently in the 2010 IPL auction nobody bid on any of the Pakistani cricketers, despite having expressed an interest in them therefore having them put on the auction list. Initially they said that the decision was purely based on cricket , Pakistani team had won the 2009 T20 World Cup. There was speculation that the Pakistanis might have been denied visas, so a team would waste money by recruiting them. After questioning, the IPL board members said that the reasoning behind none of the Pakistani players being selected was simply natural and unaffected by any outside influences.

[edit] Conflicts with other Boards

Smaller boards like the WICB and NZCB have raised concerns over the impact the IPL will have on their player development and already fragile financial situation. Since players from smaller cricketing nations are not compensated as much, they have more motivation to join the IPL.[citation needed]

[edit] Media restrictions

Initially the IPL enforced strict guidelines to media covering Premier League matches, consistent with their desire to use the same model sports leagues in North America use in regards to media coverage. Notable guidelines imposed included the restriction to use images taken during the event unless purchased from cricket.com, owned by Live Current Media Inc (who won the rights to such images) and the prohibition of live coverage from the cricket grounds. Media agencies also had to agree to upload all images taken at IPL matches to the official website. This was deemed unacceptable by print media around the world. Upon the threat of boycott, the IPL eased up on several of the restrictions.[49] On 15 April 2008 a revised set of guidelines offering major concessions to the print media and agencies was issued by the IPL and accepted by the Indian Newspaper Society.[50]

[edit] Conflict with Cricket Club of India

As per IPL rules, the winner of the previous competition decides the venue for the finals.[51] In 2009, the reigning Champions, Deccan Chargers chose the Brabourne Stadium in Mumbai.[51] However, a dispute regarding use of the pavilion meant that no IPL matches could be held there. The members of the Cricket Club of India that owns the stadium have the sole right to the pavilion on match days, whereas the IPL required the pavilion for its sponsors.[52] The members were offered free seats in the stands, however the club rejected the offer, stating that members could not be moved out of the pavilion.[51][53][54]

[edit] Betting

There have been wide ranging allegations of betting throughout the tournament. Up to $11 billion was reportedly bet on games throughout the tournament, mainly during the second edition.[55]

[edit] Suspension of Lalit Modi

On 25 April 2010, the BCCI suspended Lalit Modi, the IPL chairman, for "alleged acts of individual misdemeanours". The suspension notice was served on him by Rajeev Shukla, BCCI vice-president, and N Srinivasan, the board secretary, sending an e-mail to the same effect. It followed a day of negotiations with interlocutors attempting to persuade Modi to resign but pre-empted a potentially flashpoint at a scheduled IPL governing council meeting, which Modi had said he would attend. Modi was officially barred from participating in the affairs of the Board, the IPL and any other committee of the BCCI.[56]

[edit] Chirayu Amin named IPL interim chairman

Chirayu Amin, an industrialist and head of the Baroda Cricket Association, was named interim chairman of the IPL by the BCCI, following Lalit Modi's suspension.[57] According to BCCI, many important documents were missing from the IPL and BCCI offices. "Many of the records are missing. The IT is asking for documents. We don't have them. We have asked BCCI CAO Prof Ratnakar Shetty to look into the missing records and papers," said BCCI President Shashank Manohar.[58]

[edit] References

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