Pakistan supports BCCI stand
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Friday supported the Board of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) but dismissed apprehensions that the Asian bloc was a threat to International Cricket Council (ICC)
24-Nov-2001
The Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) Friday supported the Board
of Control for Cricket in India (BCCI) but dismissed
apprehensions that the Asian bloc was a threat to
International Cricket Council (ICC).
"I think Jaghmohan Dalmiya (BCCI president) is within his
rights to protest against the inconsistencies of the mother
body. But at the same time the concerns that world cricket
is on the verge of a split, are wrong," Lt Gen Tauqir Zia
said from Rawalpindi.
The ICC reduced the Centurion Test as unofficial after India
and United Cricket Board of South Africa (UCBSA) refused to
accept Mike Denness as match referee. The Englishman earlier
this week sanctioned six Indian cricketers, including Sachin
Tendulkar for tampering with the ball and excessive
appealing.
"Pakistan continues to regard and respect the ICC as the
supreme body. But we also fell that it needs to be more
neutral like FIFA," Tauqir said.
As chairman of the Asian Cricket Council (ACC), Tauqir said:
"If the Asian body is not united, how it can challenge the
authority of ICC."
India withdrew from ACC's Asian Test Championship earlier
this year and also cancelled its scheduled tours to Pakistan
and Sharjah.
Tauqir admitted that Dalmiya called him Wednesday but
refused to reveal any details except that he had asked his
support for a more consistent ICC. "I don't think Dalmiya's
decision for a review of Denness' punishment to six players
is unjustified "He is within his right to do that. Because
personally I do believe that the penalties imposed on the
Indian players barring Tendulkar are too harsh.
What we feel is that it is time the ICC functions more as a
neutral body and has more uniformity and consistency in
enforcing its rules and regulations and code of conduct for
teams and players.
"You can't have different set of rules and regulations for
different players. I can quote many examples in the recent
past where ICC officials have interpreted and enforced the
code of conduct rules and regulations without any uniformity
or consistency," Tauqir said.
Tauqir defended Denness' decision to penalize Tendulkar but
felt that on-the-field umpires should be given more
authority to deal with issues "They are the ones who watch
everything on field. That is precisely why Pakistan is
asking for more powers to be given to the umpires on and off
the field."