December 5, 2025
Home » SL Rugby’s Fijian Scandal: The Secret Plot & Those Responsible in Destroying the Country’s Reputation

2 thoughts on “SL Rugby’s Fijian Scandal: The Secret Plot & Those Responsible in Destroying the Country’s Reputation

  1. Right of Reply: Defamatory Insinuations and Factual Clarifications Regarding Sri Lanka Rugby

    To: The Editor, Morning Telegraph

    Subject: Rejoinder to “SL Rugby’s Fijian Scandal: The Secret Plot & Those Responsible in Destroying the Country’s Reputation”

    From: Hafeez Marso – Deputy Inspector General of Police (Retd)

    Dear Editor,

    I write to exercise my right of reply and to demand immediate correction to the above-titled article, which contains unfounded insinuations, baseless personal attacks, and misleading representations that harm reputations and violate fundamental principles of journalistic fairness.

    1) Malicious Aspersions on Absentees;
    The article implies that individuals who were not present at an alleged “secret meeting” are complicit by silence. This insinuation is false, defamatory, and logically flawed.

    I was neither informed of such a meeting nor invited. The “minutes” posted in the said article were never officially served or circulated through legitimate channels. To suggest guilt or complicity based on non-attendance at a meeting I was never notified of is not only irrational, but also a clear attempt to smear reputations through innuendo.
    2) Breach of Process Integrity and Transparency
    Sri Lanka Rugby’s governance framework demands proper notice, documentation, and adherence to process. Where such protocols are ignored or selectively applied, speculation cannot be elevated to the status of fact.

    Assertions regarding decision – making processes must be based on verifiable documentation, not hearsay or conjecture. Any departure from due process should be scrutinized, not defended by responsible journalism.

    3) Uncalled-for Personal Remarks
    The article digresses into personal commentary, unjustifiably dragging in names unrelated to the matter at hand. Such commentary lacks relevance and ournalistic merit.

    Responsible reporting is grounded in fact and relevance to public interest. Personal attacks, insinuations, and character assassinations serve neither the reader nor the cause of transparency.

    4) Clarifying My Record and Reputation
    The article makes oblique references that cast doubt on my character and integrity. Ordinarily, I do not find it necessary to enumerate my contributions, but in this instance, I am compelled to correct the record.

    My service to rugby and national sport spans decades:

    Sri Lanka Police Rugby:
    13 seasons A-Division (1979–1991);
    Sri Lanka caps (1984–1990); Coach (2002–2004);

    Coach, Police Rugby 2001 – 2004

    Secretary, Police Rugby (2013–2016);

    Member of multiple rugby committees.

    Sri Lanka Rugby (SLR):
    Appointed to the Executive Committee under Clause 31.3 of the former Constitution (co-opted, no voting rights);

    Chairman – Disciplinary Committee (2019/20);

    Chairman – Constitution Drafting Committee (2018).

    National Appointments:
    Member – National Sports Council (2018, 2023);

    National Sports Selection Committee (2020);

    Rugby Advisory Committees –
    National (2021),
    Schools (2024);
    Working Task Force – Rugby (2025) and SL Karate-Do Federation (2025).

    Other Sports Contributions – Basketball
    Represented Sri Lanka in basketball (1978–1984);

    National Championship titles, the biggest Cager event:
    Western Province (1976),
    Mercantile (1978), and
    Police (1988–1991), winning six National championships across a 13-year span.

    I retired from public servicr with a clean sheet after serving 38 years. These are my credentials of a servant-leader, not the caricature advanced in the article.

    5) Formal Request for Correction and Apology
    In view of the above, I respectfully request that you to;

    1. Publish this rejoinder in full, with equal prominence to the original article;

    2. Amend the original article to remove defamatory and misleading references to me and other absentees;

    3. Issue a formal apology to those named or implicitly maligned.

    Should timely corrective action not be taken, I reserve all legal rights and remedies, including but not limited to claims for defamation and applications for take down orders, public corrections, and costs.

    Yours faithfully,
    Hafeez Marso
    Deputy Inspector General of Police (Retd)

  2. Good Marso, you call yourself an officer and a gentleman. Then surely you know the rugby fraternity deserves nothing less than the truth. It is time the Ministry finally calls for a full, independent inquiry so that the real story is laid bare. And when that truth is established, every single individual who sat at that infamous meeting should be handed a life ban—barred from holding any position in any sports body in Sri Lanka or overseas.

    What greater disgrace could there be? What greater shame on our sporting identity than to see shameless individuals, one of whom has never even played the game, continuously pulling the strings in rugby? This same person—rejected by clubs, schools, and associations alike—has been exposed time and again for unscrupulous activities and yet still finds protection within the system.

    Millions in financial receipts remain unaccounted for. Sponsorship funds have evaporated without trace. International credibility has been shredded. And still, this mastermind—this architect of rugby’s rot—is allowed to operate, using influence and manipulation to keep rugby trapped in his web.

    Sri Lanka Rugby cannot and will not heal unless there is zero tolerance. The rugby fraternity must stand united: those responsible must never again be allowed anywhere near the sport. Life bans, accountability, and transparency are the only way forward. Anything less would be a betrayal of the game, the players, and the people.

    We must accept the reality: a document has been leaked. It was hidden deliberately, and now it is in the public domain. Let us not blame the journalists for exposing it—after all, their duty is to shine light where others would rather keep darkness. The real question is not about who leaked it, but why it was hidden in the first place.

    At the core of this fiasco lies a simple, undeniable fact: Sri Lanka Rugby is being forced to pay a £50,000 fine because of the reckless actions of a few individuals. This is not the time for cover-ups or petty finger-pointing. It is not the time to launder dirty linen to protect old allies. It is the time to confront the truth head-on.

    Sri Lanka Rugby has been used, abused, and betrayed. And now the price of that betrayal is being paid not by the guilty, but by the institution itself—by the players, the unions, and the wider rugby community. Until accountability is enforced and the culprits are removed once and for all, we will continue to suffer for their sins.

    The Fijian fiasco is not about a leak. It is about a lie. And the longer that lie is allowed to stand, the deeper rugby will sink into shame.

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