Sports

Cricket South Africa’s entire board resigns

Wednesday, October 28th, 2020 00:00 | By
Jasraj Kundi, Sikh Union captain bats in a T20 Nairobi Invitational Cricket League match against Ruaraka at the Sikh Union grounds yesterday. Photo/PD/ALEX NJUE

Johannesburg, Tuesday

The administration of South African cricket, which has been lurching from one crisis to another since the suspension of Thabang Moroe as Chief Executive last December, has finally been provided with an opportunity to wipe the slate clean following the resignation of the organisation’s entire board.

Six of Cricket South Africa’s directors, including acting President Beresford Williams together with four non-independent directors and an independent board member, resigned at a meeting on Sunday. 

By Monday morning, the other non-independent director, Zola Thamae, and the three remaining independents, Eugenia Kula-Ameyaw, Marius Schoeman and Vuyokazi Memani-Sedile threw in the towel.

“All resignations are with immediate effect except for three members, namely, Zola Thamae, John Mogodi and Donovan May, who will remain as directors until the interim board structure has been appointed to ensure the continuity and stability of the organisation,” Cricket South Africa (CSA) said in a statement.

Former CSA President, Norman Arendse, told BBC Sport Africa that the “resignations were inevitable”.

“Given all the pressure the organisation was under since last year when the then Chief Executive revoked the accreditation of five senior journalists for reporting on developments, that didn’t reflect well on Cricket South Africa,” Arendse said.

“When an organisation loses the trust and confidence of the cricketing public and two big sponsors, who quit because of their unhappiness with the state of affairs, it was always going to be difficult for the board members to continue,” Arendse added.

The pressure gained momentum over the past month following the CSA board’s persistent refusal to release the summary of a forensic audit report that was commissioned after Moroe’s suspension last year.

When the report, which was handed to the board on 31 July, was eventually released on 9 October to the South African parliament’s sports portfolio committee, Moroe was accused of alleged corrupt practices and failure to comply with company policy. 

The clearing of the decks paves the way for the appointment of an interim steering committee in compliance with a directive from the South African Sports Confederation and Olympic Committee (Sascoc). 

Until the steering committee is finalised Rihan Richards, who was named president of the Members’ Council on Sunday, will head a four-person interim board.

The mass resignations come after the board stubbornly refused to resign amid growing pressure from Minister Mthethwa and Sascoc to do so. -AFP

More on Sports


ADVERTISEMENT