[ad_1]
Sascoc is accusing Cricket South Africa Acting Chairman Beresford Williams of breaking his promise regarding the now confidential forensic report.
According to RelationshipSascoc Acting Chairman Aleck Skhosana wrote two letters to the cricket governing body on Friday, one of which was addressed directly to Williams for not allowing the organization to access the report.
He also made an express promise to us that the report would be available to us without restriction, but subsequently reneged on this express promise and commitment when the CSA Company Secretary wrote SASCOC to tell them that the report would only be made available to the Acting President of SASCOC (and, subsequently, SASCOC’s board) in a restricted way, in terms of which we are obliged to sign confidentiality agreements ”, reads part of the letter.
This comes after another week of drama at CSA after Sascoc officially stepped in and suggested to the board members that they step aside on paid leave while they launch an investigation into the issues that have been developing in recent months. .
READ: Sascoc intervenes in the CSA disaster
CSA responded on Friday saying that it does not agree with Sascoc’s resolution and will seek legal advice on Sascoc’s intentions to take over the corporate management of the organization.
CSA has refused to disclose the contents of the forensic audit to the public and only members of the council can view certain sections of the report at the offices of Bowmans, CSA’s attorneys, if they sign a nondisclosure agreement.
The report is believed to be over 400 pages long and involves a host of misconduct that has ruined CSA’s operational performance over the past three years.
This condition is totally unacceptable and unreasonable given the nature of the content of the report so far made public. It is almost impossible for both its members and the SASCOC Board to adequately address the issues and concerns (all well documented) that plague CSA without considering the full content of the forensic reports, ” continued Skhosana’s letter to Beresford.
On Saturday, Skhosana also wrote a letter to the ICC to ensure that Sascoc’s involvement is not government interference.
ALSO READ: CSA responds to the acquisition of Sascoc
The ICC has strict rules regarding government interference in partner countries and can prohibit the participation of nations if these rules are broken.
[ad_2]