Pakistan fast bowler Shoaib Akhtar, 32, has been banned for five
years by a disciplinary committee of the PCB for violating the players'
code of conduct. The ban extends to cricket for and in Pakistan but
will leave him free to play in the Indian Premier League (IPL), which
begins later this month.
Legspinner Danish Kaneria, also charged with criticising the PCB,
was let off with a severe reprimand as it was his first offence.
Shoaib had appeared before a disciplinary committee in February
after being charged with publicly criticising the Pakistan board
for offering him a retainership instead of a contract. The board had
offered contracts to 15 players, based on a formula that took into
account their performance, but Shoaib was demoted to a retainership
from the Category A contract he held last year.
"The board has lost confidence in Shoaib Akhtar and therefore felt
his presence in the field was damaging to the Pakistan team, for
Pakistan players and for the image of Pakistan cricket," the PCB
chairman, Nasim Ashraf, told AFP. "The committee has recommended a
five-year ban for Shoaib Akhtar. He will be ineligible to play in
Pakistan or to play for Pakistan anywhere else in the world. [It is] a
sad day for me and for Shoaib Akhtar. He is such a talented player."
Shoaib, who can appeal this decision, was already on two years'
probation for hitting Mohammad Asif with a bat before the start of the
World Twenty20 in South Africa in 2007. That offence saw him fined 3.4
million rupees ($52,000 dollars) and banned for 13 matches, and left
him facing the prospect of a life ban today.
Kaneria, Ashraf said, had been let off with a severe reprimand and
has been barred from issuing any press statements. In his column,
Kaneria said he felt he deserved more respect as an established senior
player in the side and was not satisfied with the board's explanation
of his demotion from category "B" to "C" in the central contracts.
Ref: http://content-usa.cricinfo.com/pakistan/content/story/344698.html