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India Bans Crypto Advertising at Women’s Premier League Cricket Tournament

2 mins
Updated by Geraint Price
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In Brief

  • The Board of Control for Cricket has told the Women's Premier League teams not to advertise crypto-related products.
  • WPL is an upcoming women's cricket franchise league.
  • The BCCI faced criticism for allowing fantasy sports advertising, while prohibiting crypto marketing campaigns.
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The Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) has banned crypto advertising at its latest women’s tournament.

India has maintained a strict stance against cryptocurrencies as the top ministry believes it is used for illicit purposes. The country also imposed a flat 30% tax on crypto gains and a 1% Tax Deduction at Source (TDS) to crack down on trading activities.

Recently BCCI, the cricket governing body in India, warned the Women’s Premier League (WPL) teams not to associate with crypto-related companies. The WPL is the women’s counterpart to the Indian Premier League (IPL), which boasts over 3 million attendees per season. The tournament starts on Mar. 4,

BCCI Prohibits Advertising for Crypto Firms While Allowing Fantasy Sports

According to a Cricbuzz article, the BCCI has asked teams in a 68-page advisory not to sign advertising deals with cryptocurrency-related firms. 

The instruction reads, “No Franchisee shall undertake a partnership or any kind of association with an entity that is in any way connected/related to an entity that is involved/operates, directly or indirectly, in the cryptocurrency sector.” As an obvious consequence, any contractual arrangement with any blockchain service provider, fan tokens, collectables, that are directly or indirectly affiliated to the cryptocurrency sector are a no-no for the WPL.”

However, the board has allowed associations with fantasy sports companies. Crypto influencer Shivam Chhuneja calls it hypocrisy from the BCCI and a “massive campaign to throttle the growth of crypto.”

India wants the G20 group of countries to establish a crypto standard operating protocol. The country took over the presidency of the G20 from Indonesia on Dec. 1.

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Harsh Notariya
Harsh Notariya is an Editorial Standards Lead at BeInCrypto, who also writes about various topics, including decentralized physical infrastructure networks (DePIN), tokenization, crypto airdrops, decentralized finance (DeFi), meme coins, and altcoins. Before joining BeInCrypto, he was a community consultant at Totality Corp, specializing in the metaverse and non-fungible tokens (NFTs). Additionally, Harsh was a blockchain content writer and researcher at Financial Funda, where he created...
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