PCB arbitrator lifts Shoaib Malik ban

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PCB arbitrator lifts Shoaib Malik ban

The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) lifted Shoaib Malik’s 12-month ban for ill-discipline on Saturday, making the former captain available for selection to the national team.

By (Reuters)

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Published: Sat 29 May 2010, 8:05 PM

Last updated: Mon 6 Apr 2015, 2:46 AM

“I have decided to uphold his appeal and remove the ban as the board has extensively monitored his behaviour in the last three months,” PCB arbitrator and retired judge Irfan Qadir told reporters in Lahore.

Qadir said the board had noticed a marked improvement in Malik’s behaviour and attitude, and halved a two-million-rupee ($23,480) fine imposed on the all-rounder to one million rupees.

The PCB appointed Qadir as an appeals judge after they banned and fined seven players in March following a probe into the team’s troubled tour of Australia early this year.

“I was shocked when they imposed the ban and it was not acceptable to me. But I am happy that I have been vindicated now,” Malik told a local news channel.

“I am delighted this stigma of a ban has been removed from my name.”

The board imposed 12-month bans and fines on Malik and all-rounder Rana Naved as well as indefinite suspensions on former captains Younus Khan and Muhammad Yousuf.

Current skipper Shahid Afridi and wicketkeeper Kamran Akmal were each fined three million rupees and Umar Akmal two million.

All the players with the exception of Yousuf, who announced his retirement from international cricket, appealed against their bans and fines.

National selectors included Malik and Younus in a list of 35 probables for the Asia Cup one-day tournament and test tour to England, with the final squads due to announced on June 2.

ACTED HASTILY

However, Qadir said he would not be able to conduct Younus’s appeal hearing until June 5 following a request by the player’s lawyer to delay proceedings.

Former test player and chief selector Abdul Qadir criticised the PCB for removing Malik’s ban, saying the board had acted too hastily.

“It is not a good omen for Pakistan cricket,” Abdul Qadir told Reuters.

“Based on the video recordings of the inquiry committee hearings the action taken by the board was appreciated,” he added. “But by doing a U-turn apparently because of political pressure, the board has once again put Pakistan cricket at risk.”

Former test bowler Jalaluddin said he could not understand when and how the board had been able to monitor Malik’s behaviour since March.

“Most of the time he has been in either India or Dubai after his marriage,” he said.

Leaked video recordings of the probe committee showed Afridi, Yousuf and former team officials Intikhab Alam and Abdul Raquib blaming Malik for creating disharmony within the team on the tours to New Zealand and Australia.

Naved said the board should have ended the bans on all the players.

“I am happy Malik is free to play again but I think the board should also clear the other players including myself as I want to play for my country again,” Naved said from London. (Editing by Clare


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