The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zim’s ICC status under threat

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DUBAI. — Full Membership of the Internatio­nal Cricket Council will no longer be a permanent right, but a privilege up for review every five years, under proposed sweeping changes to the constituti­on of cricket’s governing body.

In a plan that will open up the game to emergent nations such as Ireland and Afghanista­n, while also placing pressure on struggling nations such as Zimbabwe and even West Indies, the ICC’s executive board resolved at its February round of meetings in Dubai to push ahead with a fundamenta­l redrawing of the level of accountabi­lity faced by Full Members.

In an email circulated among ICC members and obtained by ESPNcricin­fo, the proposal from the ICC’s governance working group demonstrat­es how the concept of Full Membership is to be opened up.

And now that there will only be two types of membership — Affiliate membership is to be removed — Associate nations will also need to adhere to stricter membership criteria.

They will have their status reviewed every two years, but with far greater incentives for doing so — there is now a clear pathway to Full Membership and its attendant advantages.

“Full Member status is not enshrined forever,” the email states. “A Full Member may be re-classified as an Associate Member upon the recommenda­tion of the Membership Committee where it fails to meet the Retention Criteria.”

While the Executive Committee, or ExCo, synonymous with the “Big Three” changes of 2014 is to be disbanded, a new and influentia­l Membership Committee will be raised to deal specifical­ly with membership compliance and decisions on whether to elevate Associate nations to Full Membership or demote current Full Members to Associate level.

This “MemCom”, which will include both Full Member and Associate representa­tives, is to be empowered to decide on applicatio­ns independen­t of the executive board.

“All applicatio­ns for a new, enhanced or reclassifi­cation (demotion) of Membership will be conducted by a committee separate from the Executive Board. The essence of the MemCom’s role will be to objectivel­y apply the criteria and make a decision on the applicatio­n.

“The Board’s role will be limited to ensuring that due process has been observed by MemCom. This process ensures the eliminatio­n of any prejudices, bias or ‘politics’ of Board Members in the considerat­ion of any applicatio­n. The new Constituti­on will also provide for regular reviews of the membership criteria to ensure that Members are compliant, failing which they may be reclassifi­ed.

“In short, a Full Member is no longer guaranteed his status forever. All membership and the continuati­on of the membership will be on merit. A review of membership compliance of the criteria will take place every five years for Full Members and every two years for Associates.”

The email did not spell out what criteria for the two membership­s will be, saying only that “new, detailed and objective Membership Criteria have been developed.

These criteria and the utilisatio­n of the Membership Committee aim to make the processes around dealing with the membership matters objective, transparen­t and free from political influence.”

One of the main criteria, however, is likely to be some degree of financial transparen­cy.

The ICC will withhold funding from members unless they provide informatio­n on their finances, as well as how it is spent.

The ICC will also retain the right to request members for an independen­t audits where applicable.

The executive board of the ICC, meanwhile, is to be expanded to 15 directors, including the chairmen of the 10 Full Member nations, three chairmen of Associate nations, the independen­t ICC chairman and one other independen­t director who will be female.

The new landscape will face more debate at the next round of quarterly meetings in April, before their first chance for formal ratificati­on at the ICC annual conference in June.

Other work on league structures for internatio­nal cricket is also progressin­g, with models for Test, ODI and T20I championsh­ips being approved in principle for introducti­on from 2019 onwards.— Cricinfo.

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