Pakistan cricketâs chief Ijaz Butt has said his board will not make any appeals for leniency for 18-year-old fast bowler Mohammad Amir in the spot-fixing controversy. Butt was speaking in New Delhi after meeting with ICC chief Sharad Pawar on Thursday afternoon.
He told the Indian news channel NDTV that Amir would be treated like the other two Pakistan cricketers suspended for their role in the spot-fixing controversy. âDifferent standards cannot be applied for different cricketers,â he said, adding that according to the PCB the players had to be thought of as âinnocent unless proven guiltyâ. If they are found guilty Butt said, âthe book will be thrown at themâ.
The cricket administrators emerged out of Pawarâs residence after the meeting which lasted close to 75 minutes. Butt said the âfirst and foremost reasonâ he was in Delhi was because he âowed him (Pawar) one because we had not met after he became the ICC president - I have a lot of respect for him and he is a dear friendâ.
The two had talked about the suspended players but Butt said he would not comment on the investigation until it was complete, though he did add it was âwrong of the police to search the playersâ room without their permissionâ. Butt said the PCB had protested strongly when it was discovered that the Pakistan dressing room at Lordâs had been searched without the knowledge of either the English or the Pakistan boards. He said only the MCC, as the hosts, were informed about the search.
Buttâs meeting with Pawar appears to be a move to gain support in the ICC to put forward a case for Indo-Pak cricket. Butt was quick to say he âdidnât see an India bias in the ICC suspension - but I am not a politicianâ and wanted ties between the two nations to âresume as soon as possibleâ.
The resumption of ties, he believed, would be quickened if an India-Pakistan series was to be held at a neutral venue. âIf we can play against Australia in England, why canât we play India?â, Butt said, adding that the PCB had a few suggestions to offer to the Indians as his Board had discussed the possibility âfor a long timeâ. A BCCI official, however, told ESPNcricinfo that a neutral series seemed âimpossibleâ at this stage due to both the political climate between India and Pakistan as well as the spot-fixing controversy.
In his television interview, Butt said Pakistanâs defeat in the Lordâs Test, by an innings and 225 runs, had proved that âthere was no match-fixing in that game - the three no balls had nothing to do with the ultimate resultâ. He said that the media coverage had shifted during the week following the Lordâs Test. âFirst everyone said match-fixing. Then they switched to spot-fixing, spot-fixingâ.
The anger in Pakistan after the ICCâs first-ever suspension of players was not reinforced by the PCB chief who told the media, âwe are not angry about the players being suspended ⌠the ICCâs Code of Conduct is clear and the ICC has the authority to do what they didâ. Butt said, âthe PCB is a part of the ICC and we should work together for a solutionâ.
As the ICC chief, Pawar was âduty boundâ to meet Butt, his aides told ESPNcricinfo. âHe has to be accessible to all member boards - particularly an ICC member in distress.â
Pawar said the Scotland Yard investigation into the charges against four Pakistan players is likely to end soon. âPrima facie there are some allegations and we have suspended the players on the basis of that,â Pawar said. "Scotland Yard has permitted them to go back to Pakistan and the PCB has also promised to make them available to the investigators if required. Nobody is playing hide and seek.
âA major investigation agency is carrying out the probe and that will not take long. Neither the PCB nor ICC will interfere in the process.â