07 April,2009 03:17 PM IST | | AP
The Associated Press will not be covering this year's IPL tournament in South Africa because organisers have imposed unacceptable conditions on media outlets covering the event.
The AP and major international news organisations Reuters and Agence France-Presse sought to persuade Indian Premier League organisers to change their minds about terms and conditions imposed on media.
The News Media Coalition, an association that represents a worldwide collection of news organizations, has also tried without success to resolve the dispute.
IPL chief executive Lalit Modi refused to amend conditions, including one that bars media groups from supplying news and photos about IPL events to websites that specialise in cricket.
ALSO READ
366 Indians, Pant, Iyer in IPL top bracket, 13-year-old Vaibhav youngest
574 players for IPL auctions: 366 Indians, Pant, Iyer in top bracket, 13-year-old Vaibhav youngest
"My aim is to get back into T20 team, look forward to this IPL": KL Rahul
Trump's pick of Rubio as America's top diplomat jolts Latin America, long accustomed to US neglect
My aim is to get back into T20 team, look forward to this IPL to give me platform: KL Rahul
The IPL has signed an exclusive agreement to supply news and photos about the Twenty20 tournament to one Web site. "We can't allow the sponsor of a newsworthy event to specify where news gets distributed," said Dave Tomlin, the AP's associate general counsel.
"This is a case in which a sports association is now in the information business too and is trying to carve out an exclusive segment of the news market as its own to exploit. It's wrong."
The world's major news agencies also declined to cover last year's inaugural tournament because of similar issues. This year's tournament has been switched to South Africa because of security concerns in India.
"The IPL is shooting itself in the foot," said Simon Haydon, the AP's International Sports Editor. "The tournament is in its infancy and needs media coverage, especially when it is being held far from its home base. The AP wants to cover the tournament and supply subscribers with comprehensive match reports and photos, but has been forced out by the IPL's inflexible stance."