Khaleej Times

Pakistan to take strong stand in PSL probe

- AFP

lahore — Pakistani cricket officials said Monday they would make an example of openers Sharjeel Khan and Khalid Latif if found guilty in a coruption probe that threatens to torpedo the Pakistan Super League (PSL).

The pair, suspended after being accused of meeting a suspicious person linked to an internatio­nal betting syndicate, could face up to a life ban from internatio­nal and domestic cricket under Pakistan Cricket Board corruption rules.

PCB chief Shaharyar Khan said officials are seeking a “deterrent” punishment if the Islamabad United players, who have been sent home from the continuing PSL tournament in the UAE, are found guilty of spot-fixing.

The PCB will take a strong stand so that players no longer think “they can do something and play after four or five years, so that no one dares to do it again”, he told media in Dubai, where the Twenty20 tournament is being held due to security fears in Pakistan.

Pakistan came under severe criticism for allowing Mohammed Amir to return to internatio­nal cricket after he, along with Salman Butt and Mohammed Asif, were involved in a spot-fixing scandal at the Lord’s Test against England in 2010.

All three players completed their five-year bans in September last year. Butt and Asif are also in line for national selection.

Shaharyar Khan also voiced frustratio­n over the allegation­s, which Latif and Sharjeel have denied, and the effect they have had on the highly anticipate­d PSL, in only its second year.

“The whole nation takes a keen interest in the PSL, so it’s an important event and any stigma ... is disappoint­ing,” he said.

“More so because players are regularly given lectures on how to avoid corruption.”

Khan said a tribunal would be formed to hear the PSL case, after which a disciplina­ry committee would be set up. —

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