The Asian Age

ICC panel to resolve issue

● The Pakistan Cricket Board is seeking $ 70 million in compensati­on. It initiated dispute resolution proceeding­s against the BCCI at the ICC in November last year. A threemembe­r panel will hear the claim later this year, the sport’s world governing body

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Lahore, April 11: The Internatio­nal Cricket Council has created a dispute resolution panel to hear Pakistan’s compensati­on claim against archrival India for refusing to play a bilateral series.

Sporting ties between the cricket- mad South Asian neighbours have suffered in recent years amid rising political tensions, and Pakistani cricket authoritie­s say their Indian counterpar­ts have violated a 2014 memorandum of understand­ing under which the two were to play six bilateral series between 2015 and 2023.

The Pakistan Cricket Board is seeking $ 70 million in compensati­on. It initiated dispute resolution proceeding­s against the Board of Control for Cricket in India at the ICC in November last year.

A three- member panel will hear the claim later this year, the sport’s world governing body said in a statement Tuesday.

“The hearing will take place in Dubai from 1- 3 October and the decision of the Dispute Panel shall be non- appealable” and binding on both Pakistan and India, the ICC said.

The BCCI refused to play two series against Pakistan in 2015 and 2017, saying it did not have permission from the Indian government because of strained relations.

India- Pakistan ties, including sports and cultural contacts, plummeted after the 2008 militant attacks in Mumbai, which New Delhi blamed on Pakistani militant groups.

There has been just one bilateral tour since, when Pakistan visited India to play two Twenty20s and three one- day internatio­nals in December 2012 and January 2013.

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