The under-fire N Srinivasan's adamant stand of sticking on to the post of BCCI president despite the damaging Indian Premier League spot-fixing scam prompted Board Treasurer Ajay Shirke and Secretary Sanjay Jagdale to resign in protest on Friday night.
"Wait for a day, you will hear something significant," said Jaitley when asked if the five vice presidents of the Board, including him, could put in their papers on Saturday.
The crisis in the BCCI has deepened with every passing day after Srinivasan's son-in-law and Chennai Super Kings Team Principal Gurunath Meiyappan was arrested for alleged involvement in betting.
Srinivasan, whose company India Cements owns CSK, refused to resign despite repeated calls for his ouster, insisting that he did no wrong. He has, however, convened an emergency working committee meeting next week hours after information spilled out that the International Cricket Council had warned Meiyappan to keep away from bookies at the start of the IPL.
Significantly, Jagdale, who is also a member of the three-member inquiry commission to go into allegations against Meiyappan and CSK, also opted out of the inquiry committee. "I have expressed my inability to join the probe," Jagdale said on Friday when asked whether he would continue in the panel which has two retired judges on it.
There was intense speculation that joint secretary Anurag Thakur will also put in his papers today to put more pressure on Srinivasan. The five vice presidents are Jaitley (North), Niranjan Shah (West), Sudhir Dabir (Central), Chitrak Mitra (East) and Shivlal Yadav (South).
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