The three cricketers, who are accused of having provided no balls in order in the fourth test against England at Lord's in August last year, has spent the last six days before a hearing by a court independent anti-corruption in Doha.
The trio were all charged with various offenses under Article 2 of the Code of the ICC against corruption. They deny any wrongdoing, but has been temporarily suspended since the allegations appeared in the days following the test.
Butt, Amir and Asif appeared before a three-person committee consisting of Chairman Michael Beloff QC, South African Justice Albie Sachs and Sharad Rao, member of the Kenyan Court of Arbitration for Sport.
Session, the players have dealt with the interrogation because they wanted to defend charges.
The ICC hearing into the activities of suspended trio is sitting fifth day in Doha.
Asif was the last of the three to testify in his defense on Monday before closing arguments.
A three-person panel, chaired by Michael Beloff QC, who retired to negotiate penalties will be published Tuesday.
Backbone of the evidence against the trio is a 54-page document outlining the News study of the world.
The cricketers are accused of organizing and carrying out three that have been pre-ordered any ball last August.
NOTW Document means that there are details of phone calls and texts involving many actors and investigative reporter Mazhar Mahmood.
We hope that the ICC obtained phone records corroborate the police investigation will make his case against the sealing of the players. The prosecution also had hoped to clear the proposal by the High Commissioner of Pakistan to Britain, Wajid Shamsul Hasan, the New World recorded Majeed "predictions" of any ball in the first test day of the Lord, having been it.
It is expected independently of the phone records confirm the history of the newspaper.
Scotland Yard told Sky News that the files that describe their research, separate from the International Criminal Court, are "currently with the decision of the Crown Prosecution Service."
The Court would take close to a scandal that has rocked the cricket world and Pakistan after the News of the World published the story saying that a businessman Mazhar Majeed approved £ 150,000 to organize Butt, Amir Asif and intentionally did not balls in a bowl.
0 comments:
Post a Comment