"You (BCCI) can assist us. IPL will be held next year also...Again the same issue will crop up. If certain places do not have facilities like water then do not hold matches there. As a parent body, BCCI should be taking care of all this before hand so that the franchises do not suffer in the end. BCCI cannot just lift its hands up," Chief Justice Manjula Chellur said.
The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) is also a party to the litigation as in April this year a public interest litigation was filed by NGO Loksatta Movement seeking IPL matches, usually held in March-April-May, to be shifted out of the state as over 60 lakh litres of water are used for ground management despite the state reeling under drought.
The BCCI today told the court to excuse it from the litigations as their role is over, but the HC refused and said IPL tournament will be held next year also.
On April 13, another bench of the high court while directing shifting of IPL matches out of the state, had noted that several districts in Maharashtra were not even getting water for sanitation and other purposes and that the non-potable water being used by the stadiums to maintain pitches can be of use in such districts.
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