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Sports

India’s JioStar terminates Bangladesh IPL cricket broadcast deal, letter shows

  • “The agreement stands terminated with immediate effect,” JioStar said in a letter dated February 17 to Bangladesh broadcaster TSports
Published March 31, 2026 Updated March 31, 2026 12:30pm
Photo: Reuters
Photo: Reuters
By

CHENNAI/DHAKA:  Indian billionaire Mukesh Ambani’s entertainment venture ​JioStar has terminated its broadcast deals in Bangladesh for the Indian Premier League ‌cricket tournament, saying its local partner defaulted on payments, according to a document seen by Reuters.

Bangladesh in January banned IPL broadcasts after one of its teams, Kolkata Knight Riders, dropped Bangladesh pacer Mustafizur Rahman on ​Indian cricket board’s instruction, just as tensions rose between the two countries following the ​killing of a Hindu man in Bangladesh.

Though Bangladesh is reviewing the ban ⁠and had on Saturday said any further steps will depend on the opinion of its ​sports ministry, the termination by JioStar means there will be no local broadcaster for the ​IPL season, even if the country were to change its stance.

“The agreement stands terminated with immediate effect,” JioStar said in a letter dated February 17 to Bangladesh broadcaster TSports, which had sublicensed the rights from JioStar ​for IPL seasons from 2023 to 2027.

The company cited its partner’s “continued failure and default in ​adhering to the payment timelines stipulated under the agreement”.

JioStar, a joint venture of Ambani’s Reliance and Walt Disney, ⁠did not respond to Reuters queries. TSports and Bangladesh’s sports and information ministries also did not respond to requests for comment.

IPL, the world’s richest cricket league valued at $18.5 billion, enjoys huge popularity among the cricket-viewing public in Bangladesh, where the game is an obsession like it is in rest of the subcontinent. Its latest ⁠season started on March 28.

India-Bangladesh relations have been strained since a political transition in Dhaka in August 2024 disrupted previously close ties under former prime minister Sheikh Hasina, who fled to New Delhi after a mass uprising.

But ​there are ⁠signs of a thaw in the relations after Tarique Rahman, the newly formed government’s prime minister, said in February that Bangladesh would engage on the basis of mutual respect and shared interests with ⁠its neighbours.

A separate JioStar letter, also dated February 17, showed the ​company has also terminated its broadcast deals in Bangladesh for the Women’s Premier League cricket tournament over similar defaults.


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