DDCA secretaries seek expulsion of Chetan Chauhan, Pro-Lodha officials

DDCA secretaries seek expulsion of Chetan Chauhan, Pro-Lodha officials
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Highlights

In an explicable move, two joint secretaries of Delhi & Districts Cricket Association (DDCA) have a written a letter to BCCI president Anurag Thakur seeking expulsion of seven directors including former Test opener Chetan Chauhan for supporting Lodha Panel reforms.

​New Delhi: In an explicable move, two joint secretaries of Delhi & Districts Cricket Association (DDCA) have a written a letter to BCCI president Anurag Thakur seeking "expulsion of seven directors" including former Test opener Chetan Chauhan for supporting Lodha Panel reforms.

The letter written to Thakur by joint secretaries Subhash Sharma and Dinesh Sharma names Chauhan, Siddharth Verma, Salil Seth, Surya Prakash Sharma, Ajay Sharma, Ashok Sharma, Vikas Katyal as seven DDCA directors, who have moved "Delhi High Court seeking urgent implementation of Lodha Committee recommendations".

The letter states: "Needless to say acts of Chetan Chauhan and his team of seven minority group is an act of gross indiscipline and we demand strict action against individuals who despite being incumbent directors of association have "indulged in anti-BCCI activities and are guilty of conduct which is likely to endanger the harmony and effect the stability or interest of DDCA, such members should (be) liable for expulsion from the association."

It has been learnt that the letter has been written at the behest of president Sneh Bansal.

When Chauhan was asked, he said: "These people don't know what they are writing. It is immature of them to write such things. Our issue is not about implementation of reforms but about how DDCA has been run since end January 2014."

Without naming Bansal, Chauhan again spoke about the allegations of financial impropriety against the DDCA president.

"I will not allow the association to go into wrong hands so long as I am in the association. There is a person against whom there has been allegations of financial irregularities.

"It's funny those who had made the allegations then have now joined hands," said Chauhan.

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