I am clean, clean, clean, says Azharuddin
Former Indian captain Mohd
AC Ganesh
29-May-2000
Former Indian captain Mohd. Azharuddin in an unsigned written
statement has denied that he was the former captain who disclosed Rs.
16 crores under the Voluntary Disclosure of Income Scheme (VDIS).
Saying "this is my response" Azharuddin threw a sheet of paper from
the bus he boarded on the way to Indira Gandhi International Airport.
The unsigned statement read "This is all hearsay, all gossip. Whatever
anybody has talked about it is untrue, false and baseless. I am clean,
clean, clean. I again say that I have not disclosed Rs 16 crore in
VDIS and I am not the culprit. All the allegations which have been
made against me are false and untrue, hearsay and loads of rubbish.
Anybody can make this type of gossip video. It has really no meaning
at all."
Earlier, Assistant Commissioner of Income Tax Vishwa Bandhu Gupta who
was unaware that the conversation was being taped, had alleged that
the former captain who declared Rs. 16 crores under VDIS was
"Azharuddin", when asked whom he suspected of being the declarant.
For the first time since the recent turmoil broke, former Indian
captain Sunil Gavaskar reacted to the incident. Responding to the
video tapes the master batsman told a web site that he would talk to
the probing agency as he was not interested in the prolonged 'tossing'
game.
In his statement, Gavaskar said "The matter is in the hands of proper
authorities and the need of the hour is that all information is given
to them. That will be the quickest way to resolve this matter rather
than giving and asking for reactions for anything that crops up every
other day."
Talking to a news agency yesterday from Bangladesh, Gavaskar said
"There may be an odd rotten apple in the pack, but others are clean
and they deserve the cloud of suspicion be taken out over their heads.
A thorough inquiry should be done so that everything comes out above
the board and players can go with their heads held high." Asking for a
time frame, Gavaskar said "I certainly would like to see a time-frame
set for current players, say, before the next season starts in
September. Inquiries regarding former players and administrators can
take as long as the authorities want."
Gavaskar admitted that the media should play the role of a watchdog in
exposing any wrong doings in cricket, "but they have to decide where
to
draw the line. It should not be carried away one way or the other. The
media should remember that reputation is built over years." The scorer
of the maximum hundreds in Tests opined that the recent allegations
prove that people want to hog the limelight.
Sunny, as he is popularly known, said "If you've been in the spotlight
which is lost now, there is a tendency to rush to the media. That
temptation to get back into the spotlight is dangerous." He felt that
people tried to settle their personal scores adding "That may well be
the case. Some people might have some grudge from the past which they
want to settle now, but at the end of the day greater good will
prevail."
Finally on the punishment for those involved in match-fixing, Gavaskar
said the International Cricket Council (ICC) should delete all records
of any player found guilty and "This is apart from the law of the land
which will decide on what punishment should be given to them," he
added.
Former Test captain GS Ramchand questioned the timing of Prabhakar's
public screening of the video tapes. Speaking to a newspaper in Mumbai
Ramchand described it "a sad day for Indian cricket" and added "I feel
it was done to embarrass the Indian team on the eve of its departure
for the Asia Cup in Dhaka. If at all, he needed to hold a press
conference on the issue, he should have waited till the completion of
the event."
Ramchand felt this is bound to have an impact on the team. "This
development is bound to affect the team members. It is a sad day for
Indian cricket. Now the cricketers would not talk to anyone, including
their friends. It is not a good thing," he said.
The Mumbai cricket Association (MCA) joint secretary Ratnakar Shetty
in a statement said "it is a black day in Indian cricket." He added
"It is a great tragedy for Indian cricket. Whether Manoj Prabhakar was
right or wrong in using these methods (of videotaping conversations)
is secondary. The (recorded) statements of cricketers and
administrators exposes the Indian cricket scenario," he said. "After
reading all this, it will be difficult for people in India and abroad
to believe Indian cricketers and administrators."
Meanwhile, in a significant development, Minister of State for Youth
Affairs and Sports Syed Shanawaz Hussein said the footage shown by
Prabhakar could not form the 'basis' for a CBI inquiry into the
ongoing match-fixing scam.
On a separate front, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has
established links between the Delhi player Ajay Sharma and the
bookies. The sources revealed that some cricketers and officials
questioned by the agency have named the former Indian player. The
investigative agency sources said that they will question Ajay Sharma
on his return from England where he is playing league cricket.
The recent 90-minutes video tapes shows former Indian wicket-keeper
Kiran More, former Indian captain Ravi Shastri's wife Ritu and a
Lucknow-based chit-fund operator mentioning Ajay Sharma's name as a
key figure in the match-fixing scam. The CBI is likely to question all
those - players, administrators and others - whose names figure in the
tape in connection with the scandal.