One of its standout initiatives is a student-led e-waste recycling campaign that gained widespread support from the community
The chief justice of the High Court in the eastern city of Lahore said those under investigation in England, plus sports minister Ijaz Jakharani and Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) chairman Ijaz Butt must appear on September 7.
Local lawyer Ishtiaq Ahmed filed the treason case on Monday, calling for life bans and confiscation of all the players’ assets if they are found guilty. The charge carries a maximum death penalty.
The cricketers are alleged to have been paid to bowl no-balls at pre-determined times in a spot-fixing scam in the fourth Test against England, which Pakistan lost by an innings on Sunday.
Usually in Pakistan, court procedures are long and decisions takes years while a legal expert said if the accused fail to appear three times in a row a ruling could be made in absentia.
“The case is based only on allegations. We do not expect a hurried decision,” Azhar Siddique, a local lawyer said.
The seven national team players include Test team captain Salman Butt, Kamran Akmal, Mohammad Asif, Mohammad Aamer, plus three unnamed players, who are all accused in the sting by British Sunday tabloid the News of the World.
Police have bailed a bookmaker, Mazhar Majeed, who is alleged to be the middleman in the scam.
One of its standout initiatives is a student-led e-waste recycling campaign that gained widespread support from the community
Asian currencies were mixed on the day, with the offshore Chinese yuan gaining nearly 0.2% while the Malaysian ringgit and Korean won declined
Spot gold was trading at $2,567.13 per ounce, up 0.31 per cent
Wicketkeeper-batter Rishabh Pant will be playing his first test since a horrific car accident in December 2022
Winds will remain light to moderate, occasionally picking up during the daytime
In July 2021, the woman received a mysterious message from her husband's Facebook account that said he had lost his phone
It was once a staple of communication used by upwardly mobile professionals such as doctors and journalists back in the 1980s up to the late 1990s
‘We’ve seen the world through a cracked windshield and every scratch tells a story’