New Zealand Cricket will vote for Indian industrialist Narayanaswami Srinivasan to become chairman of the International Cricket Council tomorrow in Melbourne, despite the Indian Supreme Court barring him from his duties as president of the Indian governing body, the BCCI.
Srinivasan is one of 13 people being investigated in relation to allegations of corrupt activities surrounding the Indian Premier League and the team he owns, the Chennai Super Kings.
Srinivasan has denied any wrongdoing and persuaded the ICC executive board, the BCCI and Supreme Court of India that allegations of major impropriety should not stop him taking the chairman role.
New Zealand's representative on the ICC board, Martin Snedden, said NZC's looked at the situation carefully and sought external advice before making a decision.
"I've done a lot of fact-digging," he told the Herald at Auckland Airport before leaving for the meeting this afternoon. "The Indian cricket environment is incredibly volatile, political and factionalised. There are two factions knocking heads: One headed by Srinivasan and one by [former IPL boss] Lalit Modi. Mr Modi's camp would love to see Mr Srinivasan knocked off his perch so Mr Modi could regain some of the power he had a few years ago. The Indian Supreme Court has received the allegations and said 'we'll investigate but don't take any false inferences out of that'."