ICC hopes bans will stave off corruption

DOHA, (Reuters) – The bans given to Pakistan trio  Salman Butt, Mohammad Asif and Mohammad Amir for spot-fixing  “will act as a strong deterrent” to others from corrupting the  sport, the International Cricket Council (ICC) said yesterday.

The trio were found guilty of corruption by an ICC tribunal  on Saturday and former Pakistan captain Butt, 26, was banned for  10 years, five of them suspended.

Asif, 28, was banned for seven years with two suspended,  while 18-year-old Amir was given a straight five-year ban.

“While I am deeply saddened that this case happened in the  first place, I acknowledge and commend the decision to deliver  lengthy bans to all three players,” ICC chief executive Haroon  Lorgat said in a statement.

“Corruption in our game will never be tolerated and, once  again, I reiterate our zero-tolerance approach.

“I hope this investigation, and the verdicts delivered,  makes that message crystal-clear.”

A three-man tribunal considered the case for six days last  month following allegations in a British newspaper that the trio  had arranged for deliberate no-balls to be delivered in the  fourth test at Lord’s last year.

The start of the bans would be backdated to Sept. 2 to  include the period of provisional suspension already served by  the players, the ICC said.

The length of the punishment has divided the cricketing  world.

While some players and pundits believe teenager Amir should  not have been treated so harshly as he was coerced into  following the orders of senior team mates, others felt the ICC  should have taken a stronger stand and imposed life bans.

Pakistan’s sports minister Aijaz Hussain Jakhrani backed the  ICC’s decisions but said he thought Amir should have been  treated more leniently.

“We fully support the ICC decision and any steps taken to  root out corruption from sports,” Jakhrani told Reuters in  Karachi on Sunday.

“This decision…will go a long way to discouraging players  from adopting the short-cut to riches.

“My reservation stems from the fact that he (Amir) is just  18 years old and at such a young age you can make mistakes or  come under pressure. I think the ban is too harsh for him.”

As a result of a separate investigation, Britain’s Crown  Prosecution Service (CPS) charged the trio and 35-year-old  sports agent Mazhar Majeed on Friday with conspiracy to obtain  and accept corrupt payments and with conspiracy to cheat.