Samoa Rugby Union declared bankrupt
Samoan Prime Minister Tuilaepa Lupesoliai Sailele Malielegaoi issued a plea for funds to keep the governing body in business.
Samoa Rugby Union (SRU) has been declared bankrupt just a few days before the Pacific Island side faces Scotland at Murrayfield.
Samoa prime minister Tuilaepa Lupesoliai Sailele Malielegaoi, the SRU chairman, issued a fundraising plea to the public to keep the governing body going.
"We are bankrupt," he is quoted as saying by the Samoa Observer. "In other words we are insolvent.
"It means the Union cannot continue to pay off our debts with the banks. We also need money to pay the players so they can continue to play."
Samoa is due to come up against Scotland on Sunday (AEDT) and takes on England at Twickenham a fortnight later.
The Prime Minister, speaking at a fundraising "radiothon", added: "This is a Union which has faced many challenges around the board table and on the field.
"We are a union with endless financial tension that is continuously in the public arena, and haunted by its past failures and at times we have copped unfair and scathing criticism."