Salman butt, the former Pakistan captain, will not appear at the Southwark Crown Court in London on Friday as the hearing into corruption charges against three Pakistani players and the player agent Mazhar Majeed gets underway. As of Wednesday it is unclear whether another player, Mohammad Amir, will appear as he waits on a United Kingdom visa;Mohammad Asif, the third player, has reached the UK already.
Salman Butt will be represented by his UK-based lawyer Yasin Patel at the hearing into corruption charges
ESPNcricinfo understands that Butt's UK-based lawyer Yasin Patel will appear at what is expected to be an administrative hearing in which the actual date of when the trial starts proper will be set. If the players' lawyers have reached an understanding with the prosecution beforehand, then there should be no issue with the players not appearing for this hearing. If Amir receives his visa on Wednesday, he will likely fly out on Thursday though it is believed that if the prosecution does not object, he may also not appear in person at this hearing.
Asif, who has consistently acted out of step with the other two players through the course of the fall-out from the spot-fixing scandal, left for the UK on Tuesday. "I am going to London with a clear mind and that is to keep on fighting this case till my innocence is proven," he told reporters as he left.
Along with Majeed, the trio are facing charges of conspiracy to cheat and conspiracy to obtain and accept corrupt payments, following the Lord's Test last August in which they allegedly conspired to bowl pre-determined no-balls. The four appeared at a hearing - at the City of Westminster Magistrates' Court - on March 17, which set the date and jurisdiction for this hearing and were granted unconditional bail at the time; Majeed was told to surrender his passport.
Accepting corrupt payments is an offence under the Prevention of Corruption Act 1906 and carries a maximum sentence of seven years' imprisonment and an unlimited fine. Cheating is an offence under Section 42 of the Gambling Act 2005, carrying a maximum sentence of two years' imprisonment and an unlimited fine.
They players and their agent were charged after being questioned by Scotland Yard detectives over the alleged scandal in the Test at Lord's last August, following accusations by the News of the World tabloid newspaper.
The three players have already been banned by the ICC, which held a separate inquiry, for periods ranging from five to ten years. All three have, however, already filed appeals against their bans at the Court of Arbitration for Sport in Switzerland.
No comments:
Post a Comment