Parliament passes National Sports Bill amid Opposition uproar over Bihar SIR
The National Anti-Doping (Amendment) Bill, which reinforces NADA's autonomy as required by the World Anti-Doping Agency, was also passed by the Parliament.
PTI
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Union Sports Minister Mansukh Mandaviya presented the bills in Rajya Sabha. Photo: PTI
New Delhi, 12 Aug
The National Sports Governance Bill was on Tuesday passed by
the Parliament with Rajya Sabha giving its nod a mere 24 hours after Lok Sabha,
marking a historic first for India's sports administration that is now set to
be regulated by a national board and have its own dispute resolution mechanism.
The National Anti-Doping (Amendment) Bill, which reinforces
NADA's autonomy as required by the World Anti-Doping Agency, was also passed by
the Parliament. The two bills now await presidential assent to be notified as
acts.
Soon after Minister of Youth Affairs and Sports MansukhMandaviya moved the bills for consideration and passage in the Upper House at 3
pm, there were vociferous protests from the Opposition over revision of
electoral rolls in Bihar.
The Opposition eventually staged a walkout led by Leader of
Opposition and Congress President Mallikarjun Kharge, who demanded a discussion
on the revision of electoral rolls in Bihar.
"In 20 countries, there is sports law. I request the
Rajya Sabha to make India the 21st country with a sports law," Mandaviya
said in his address which was followed by a discussion that lasted over two
hours.
During the discussion, BJD MP Subhashish Khuntia raised
concerns about the centralisation of Sports Governance due to the Bill. He also
felt that the Bill did not have clarity on district and block level development
of athletes.
"The bill should empower, not control," he said.
Mandaviya responded by saying that the government is only
seeking to be a facilitator.
"In this bill, we are bringing transparency, not
control, not interference. Government doesn't want to control. We are being the
supporters and providers of a structure," he asserted.
Former All India Football Federation President and NCP
leader Praful Patel and Indian Olympic Association President PT Usha, who is a
nominated member, were among the prominent voices who lauded the Bill.
"It was a long-standing legislation that was required.
We have had a sports code, it's been a loose code and never stood any legal
scrutiny. What is happening today is the need of the hour," Patel said.
"We are hoping to win the 2036 bid of Olympics. That
itself would be a redefining moment for Indian sports. This bill is absolutely
in the right direction. We need this to achieve glory that is beyond cricket.
It is imperative that this bill be passed with fullest support," he added.
Usha expressed similar sentiments and said, "This bill
will usher in transparency, accountability, and gender parity. It will empower
athletes and build confidence among sponsors and federations. It is about
justice and fair-play."
Mandaviya has described it as "the single biggest
reform in sports since independence."
The most striking aspect of NSB is to create a stringent
system of accountability. The NSB will have the mandate to de-recognise a
national body that fails to hold elections for its Executive Committee or has
committed "gross irregularities in the election procedures."
Failure to publish annual audited accounts or "misused,
misapplied or misappropriated public funds" would also be liable for
action by the NSB but it would be required to consult the concerned global body
before making its move.
Another feature is the proposal for a National Sports
Tribunal, which will have the powers of a civil court and decide disputes
ranging from selection to election involving federations and athletes. Once
instituted, Tribunal's decisions can only be challenged in the Supreme Court.
NSB makes some concessions on the issue of age cap for
administrators by allowing those in the bracket of 70 to 75 to contest
elections if the concerned international bodies' statutes and bylaws allow for
it. It is a departure from the national sports code that capped the age limit
at 70.
All recognised national sports bodies would also come under
the ambit of the Right to Information (RTI) Act, something that the BCCI has
vehemently opposed since it is not dependent on government funding.
However, the cricket board has got some leeway on that front
with the government amending the Bill to ensure that RTI would be applicable
only on bodies that rely on government funding or support.
The National Anti-Doping (Amendment) Bill-2025 incorporates
the changes sought by the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA), which objected to
"government interference" in the functioning of the country's
Anti-Doping Agency (NADA). The act was originally passed in 2022 but its
implementation had to be put on hold due to objections raised by WADA.
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