The Board announced that the squad for the eight-team event, starting June 1 in England, will be picked tomorrow.
It was decided that no legal recourse will be taken against the ICC as per the diktat of the Committee Of Administrators (COA).
The ICC welcomed the decision from the BCCI to confirm the participation of defending champions India.
"The hundreds of millions of cricket fans around the world just want to see good cricket and now we can all look forward to a superb event in England and Wales starting on June 1," an ICC official said.
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It was a setback for the ousted N Srinivasan faction which was keen to take an aggressive stand. Srinivasan, in fact, joined the discussions via Skype to air his views but didn't take a confrontational stand.
"The outcome of the meeting has been positive. India will participate in the Champions Trophy. There is no pulling out. Tomorrow the squad will be sent to the ICC," IPL governing council member Rajeev Shukla told reporters after the meeting.
"Our approach should be that of trying to resolve through dialogue rather than being confrontational. There are five six issues regarding revenue and governance model which need to be sorted," Shukla said.
COA head Vinod Rai said he had already informed the players that they were going for the event starting June 1 in England.
"Of course I am relieved that they are playing Champions Trophy. But players always knew they were going. I had spoken personally to Anil Kumble and Virat Kohli that you guys are playing Champions Trophy. I have always said that USD 100 million more is okay," Rai said.
While it is being perceived as a climbdown but Amitabh Chaudhary has made it clear that participation in the Champions Trophy doesn't mean concerns are not there.
"BCCI reserves all legal options against the ICC. Playing in the Champions Trophy does not mean we agree with the ICC Revenue and governance model. Not only revenue share but governance structure is also an issue," Chaudhary told newspersons.
However, the former Jharkhand top cop agreed that negotiations should continue.
"The SGM is unanimous on one aspect. Our position as the predominant cricket country shouldn't be diminished. Most ICC members empathise with India. Now renegotiation is a sensitive issue. I wouldn't like to comment on any figures," he said.
Like Shukla, Chaudhary also praised COA's role in trying to take all BCCI units on board.
It was learnt that when the discussion on whether to send a notice to ICC took place, one of the West Zone unit official apprised that if Members Participation Agreement is invoked, one needs to give a 30-day notice period to cure the breach but India's first match against Pakistan on June 4 is before the stipulated time.
The joint Secretary also dodged questions about Shashank Manohar being the bete noire of BCCI.
"I don't believe individuals deal with institutions. Two institutions are involved and not individuals," he said.
Admitting that team selection has been delayed, Chaudhary said that coach Anil Kumble and other support staff's contracts, which come up for renewal after Champions Trophy, will be discussed very soon.