The Lanka Premier League (LPL) has terminated its contract with Mustafizur Rahman's team Dambulla Thunders with immediate effect following the arrest of team owner Tamim Rahman in Colombo on Wednesday. He was arrested under the 2019 Prevention of Offences Relating to Sports Act, which relates to corruption.
Sri Lanka police said Tamim Rahman is a British national of Bangladeshi origin and was arrested prior to boarding a flight in Colombo. The law under which he was arrested was worked on, in part, by the ICC's anti-corruption unit.
"While the specifics of the charges against Tamim remain unclear, the integrity and smooth functioning of the Lanka Premier League are of utmost importance," Sri Lanka Cricket said in a statement.
This termination aims to uphold the values and reputation of the LPL, ensuring that all participants adhere to the highest standards of conduct and sportsmanship.
"The LPL management is working diligently to address the consequences of this termination and to ensure minimal disruption to the upcoming season."
At the LPL 2024 auction held just the day before - where ICC anti-corruption unit officials were present - Thunders retained many of the players who had been a part of Dambulla Aura, their earlier avatar, and added the Afghanistan duo of Karim Janat and Hazratullah Zazai to the ranks. Janat, in fact, earned the highest bid among the fresh overseas signings, going for US$80,000.
The franchise also has in its rolls prominent overseas cricketers like Mustafizur Rahman, Ibrahim Zadran and Iftikhar Ahmed, as well as Sri Lanka internationals Dilshan Madushanka, Nuwan Thushara, Akila Dananjaya, Danushka Gunathilaka, Nuwan Pradeep and others.
What will happen to the franchise, and the league in general, remains unclear now. For starters, new ownership has to come in to bankroll the Dambulla team, who have had three changes in ownership since the league began in 2020. The Dambulla team came second in last year's LPL when they were called Dambulla Aura, but those owners have also since faced financial fraud charges.
Sri Lanka became the first South Asian nation to criminalise several offences related to match-fixing after its parliament passed all three readings of the Prevention of Offences Related to Sports bill in November 2019.