Ex-Sri Lanka chief Sanath Jayasuriya has been charged by the International Cricket Council with two breaks of its enemy of debasement code.

The 49-year-old previous all-rounder is blamed for neglecting to co-work with an examination by the administering body.

He is additionally accused of discouraging the examination by "covering, messing with or crushing proof".

Jayasuriya, a previous seat of the Sri Lanka selectors' advisory group, is viewed as one of the best one-day players.

He has 14 days to react to the charges.

As per the BBC Sinhala administration, the charges against Jayasuriya related to him declining to hand over his cell phone to ICC experts for "individual reasons".

Prior this month, Alex Marshall, general administrator of the ICC against debasement unit, declared an examination concerning "genuine charges of defilement" in Sri Lanka.

BBC Sinhala comprehends Jayasuriya was director of selectors amid the period under scrutiny

Jayasuriya was player of the competition as Sri Lanka won the World Cup in 1996 and he scored 21 centuries and took 323 wickets in 445 one-day internationals. He additionally arrived at the midpoint of 40.07 keeps running in 110 Test matches.

The previous government serves resigned from global cricket in 2011, however, kept playing Twenty20 matches until 2012.