Azhar, Sidhu to appear before enquiry committee (1 Aug 1996)
Last we heard of him, Indian cricket skipper Mohammad Azharuddin was still abroad, the nature of his business undisclosed
01-Aug-1996
1 August 1996
Azhar, Sidhu to appear before enquiry committee
By Syed Firdaus Ashraf
Last we heard of him, Indian cricket skipper Mohammad
Azharuddin was still abroad, the nature of his business undisclosed.
In the event, the Indian captain had obtained permission from the
Board of Control for Cricket in India to remain behind, while
the rest of the Indian team that toured England under his captaincy returned to India.
As per the edict of the BCCI, though, Azhar has to return to India, specifically to Bombay, within the next 48 hours - for he
is slated to face the three-man committee constituted by the
board to enquire into l`affaire Navjot Singh Sidhu.
The committee - comprising of Raj Singh Dungarpur in the
chair, BCCI secretary J Y Lele and former India captain Sunil
Gavaskar - will have its first sitting this Saturday and Sunday,
at the Bombay Cricket Association premises. The proceedings
will, it is learnt, be in camera.
The first to testify will be Sidhu himself. It will be recalled that following his abrupt departure from the Indian side
touring England, Sidhu had in a letter to BCCI president Inderjit
Singh Bindra and secretary Jagmohan Dalmiya, squarely blamed
the Indian skipper for "humiliating" him beyond all bearing.
In his letter, Sidhu indicated that his resignation from the
team, and from international cricket, was conditional. The ace
Indian batsman asked for an enquiry into the circumstances surrounding his departure, and added in his letter that if he were
found guilty, he would refrain from playing international
cricket again besides facing what- ever punishment the board
deemed fit.
The board for its part decided to wait till the end of the
tour before constituting its enquiry committee, in the interests of preserving team harmony. Once the players returned,
the board for its part constituted the three-man committee,
and empowered it to summon any player or official it deemed
fit to testify.
The committee in turn indicated that besides Sidhu and Azhar, it
would also call on tour manager Sandeep Patil, administrative manager C Nagaraj and vice captain Sachin Tendulkar to
testify. The committee is also likely, after hearing initial
testimony, to summon any other member of the touring party to
testify before it.
Sidhu has indicated that he would abide by the verdict of the
BCCI committee enquiring into the matter.
"The aim," said Gavaskar, "is to find out the reasons behind a
player`s unprecedented walk out in the middle of the tour. I
really cannot say anything further at this stage. After we finish
our enquiry, we will report to the BCCI and then it is up to
the board to take whatever decision it sees fit."
"We need to probe the entire matter and give our recommendation," said committee chairman Dungarpur.
Lele, for his part, tends to see the investigation as routine. "This is not the first time such an enquiry is being held,"
the board secretary said. "In 1991, Dilip Vengsarkar was
suspended for six months for writing a controversial article in a
newspaper, even then we had an enquiry."
Asked what action the board could possibly take against either Azhar or Sidhu, Lele refrained from comment, saying only
that "We are a fact-finding committee, it is for the board, and
not for us, to take action."
While indicating that the enquiry will begin in Bombay this
weekend, it appeared unlikely that a verdict would be arrived at
in the first sitting. At least one more sitting is possible
before the committee is ready to report to the board, sources
said.
Source :: Rediff On The NeT (https://www.rediff.co.in)